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and veggie meats; how different shapes, cre-
ate different effects and cooking times. And
of course, sauces - the key to many sauts -
will be explored here as well.
Note: Whenever a cooking process calls for
sauting, this will require the preheating of
both saut pan (or other prerequisite cooking
vessel) and cooking oil. The pan - and oil -
must first be brought up to an acceptable
temperature, whereupon, the ingredients are
only then considered ready for cooking.
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American 5tew
This hearty stew can be cooked in
about twenty minutes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 potato
1/4 cup baby lima beans - (frozen)
2 Tbsps soy oil
1/2 large onion - chopped
2 celery stalks - chopped
1 carrot - chopped
3 pieces Seitan Supreme medallions - cut
2 pinches salt
2 pinches thyme leaf
8 string beans - slant cut
2 Tbsps whole wheat flour
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
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Slice a skinned potato into large chunks, then parboil with the frozen lima
beans, for about 10 minutes. Pour off water and set parboiled vegetables
aside.
Remove tips and stems, then slant cut string beans and set aside.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil, then add chopped onion, cel-
ery and carrot. Turn heat to medium low and cover pan. Shake covered
pan - or stir - until onions soften-up a little. Slice seitan into six or eight
pieces, then add seitan to sauting mix. Work the seitan to the bottom the
pan to sear meat surfaces.
Continue cooking this mixture for several minutes, then thoroughly mix in
salt and thyme. Next, mix in the parboiled potatoes and lima beans with
string beans and flour, then continue sauting for 3 minutes.
Slowly pour vegetable stock into saut mix, then stir in the peas. Turn up
heat until contents - begin - to bubble, then immediately lower heat and
cover. Simmer - what is now a - thickening stew for several minutes more,
until carrots are soft. If stew becomes too thick, gradually add a little
water and continue cooking until stew is the right consistency.
1/4 cup peas
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Ba|ti 5tir Fry
A quick and easy saut with
authentic f|avors of northern lndia.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps soy oil
1/4 cup onions - chopped
1 carrot - thinly sliced
1/4 cup mixed: green, yellow and red
bell peppers - diced
1/2 cup cauliflower - sliced
10 each string beans - trimmed & half cut
2-3 Tbsps chickpeas - cooked
1/4 cup yam (or sweet potato) - slivered
2 pinches salt
1-2 tsps curry powder
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
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Heat a skillet or saut pan and add the oil. Begin to stir fry the chopped
onions, thinly sliced carrots and diced peppers at medium-high heat.
After two minutes, add sliced cauliflower, trimmed and half cut string
beans, cooked chickpeas, slivered yams and salt. Shake pan to flip con-
tents frequently or stir to prevent burning.
Next add the curry powder and flip contents for several seconds to lightly
brown spices. Now pour in the vegetable stock, add the peas and hand
crushed stewed tomatoes, then lower heat to medium. Cover and simmer
for five more minutes. Stir in cornstarch slurry and cook another minute to
thicken juices. Serve over cooked Brown Rice or basmati rice. Recipe
makes two meal sized portions in 15-20 minutes.
1/4 cup peas
1/4 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
peeled & mashed
1 tsp cornstarch - dissolved in
3 Tbsps cold water
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Couscous 5uccotash
A saut of s|iced and diced
Mediterranean vegetab|es, ethnic
spices and couscous. A bright and
f|avorfu| dinner.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup sundried tomatoes - soaked & chopped
2 Tbsps olive oil
3 slices red onion - chopped
1/4 cup colored bell peppers - diced
2 garlic cloves - crushed
2 pinches each: cumin, allspice, salt & black pepper
1/4 cup carrot - thin rounds
1/4 cup yam (or sweet potato) - slivered
1/4 cup tiny cauliflowerettes
1/4 cup string beans - trimmed & slant cut
1/4 cup chickpeas - cooked
1/2 lemon - juiced
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Put the sundried tomatoes in a small sauce pan with enough water to just
cover the tomatoes, then bring contents to a boil. Reduce heat and sim-
mer for 3 minutes, covered. Remove from heat and let steep for another 5
minutes before draining and use.
Heat a skillet or saut pan and add the oil. Chop the onions and begin to
fry them with diced peppers. After two minutes add crushed garlic and
spices. Adjust heat to medium low and mix in the thin cut carrots, slivered
yam, cauliflowerettes, trimmed and slant cut string beans, chopped sun-
dried tomatoes, precooked chickpeas and lemon juice. Cover and saut 5
more minutes.
Pour couscous over saut mix, add vegetable stock and peas, then cover
and simmer for 3 more minutes. To set couscous, turn off heat and allow
to stand 5 minutes covered. Shake pan or use a fork to fluff up mixture.
Serves two.
1/3 cup couscous (uncooked)
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
1/4 cup peas
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Creo|e Madness
This dish exp|ores some Cajun and
Creo|e sty|es. The thin|y s|iced
vegetab|es, diced veggie meats and
hot peppers make this a high|y
charged mea|.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps soy oil
1/2 onion - thin sliced
1/2 each: green, yellow and red bell peppers - thin sliced
1 jalapeno pepper - diced
1/4 cup each: tofu, tempeh, Perfect Gluten Flank Steak
and Basic Seitan - diced
1-2 tsps cajun spice blend
1/2 habenero pepper (optional) - diced
2 pinches salt
1/4 cup summer squash - shredded
1/4 cup zucchini - shredded
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), then add oil, thinly sliced onions and pep-
pers, then stir fry for several minutes. Next, add veggie meats, cajun spice
blend, dice habenero pepper (optional ingredient, for extra hot effect),
and salt. After a few more minutes of frying, stir in shredded summer
squash, zucchini, carrot with vegetable stock. Reduce to medium heat,
cover, and continue cooking for three more minutes. Stir in precooked
brown rice, then cook for two more minutes. Serve immediately.
Curried En|ightenment
This creamed curry saut is
reminiscent of traditiona| southeast
Asian meat curries.
1 small carrot - shredded
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1/4 cup Brown Rice - cooked
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup potato - chopped & parboiled
1 Tbsp soy oil
3-4 whole onion hearts
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Chop up and parboil potatoes, then set aside.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), then add oil, whole onion hearts. Meanwhile,
cut carrot into shards, then add to skillet. Reduce heat to low, then add
cauliflowerettes. Cover and simmer 5 minutes. Next, add shredded spin-
ach, chopped string beans, cooked chickpeas, peas, prepared potatoes,
chunked seitan, curry powder, salt., vegetable stock, then mix in sour
cream. Increase heat, cover, then continue cooking for about 3 more min-
utes, to thicken. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice.
1 carrot - shard cut
3 large cauliflowerettes
1/4 cup spinach - shredded
1/4 cup string beans - chopped
2 Tbsps chickpeas - cooked
2 Tbsps peas
6-8 chunks Basic Seitan
2 tsps curry powder
2 pinches salt
1/3 cup Vegetable Stock
3 Tbsps Sour Cream
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Darwin's Natura| 5e|ection
Dedicated to the famous vegetarian
and founder of the theory of
evo|ution, this saut contains many
of the native ingredients from
Darwin's historic trip to 5outh
America and the Ga|apagos ls|ands.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps soy oil
5 small slices yam (or sweet potato) - thin sliced
4-5 pieces carrot - shard cut
1/4 cup pineapple - chunked
5-6 small pieces colored bell pepper - sliced
2 Seitan Supreme medallions - chopped
1/4 Perfect Gluten Flank Steak - chopped
1 plantain - sliced
1/4 cup cashews - raw
1 pinch salt
1 pinch allspice
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), then add oil, thinly sliced yams, carrot shards,
pineapple chunks, sliced bell peppers, chopped seitan medallions and
gluten steak, sliced plantain, cashews, salt and spices. After 3 minutes
add corn and prefried tofu cutlets. Next, cover and braise everything with
fresh squeezed orange juice and pineapple juice. Mix the cornstarch with
the cold vegetable stock, brewed coffee, and coconut milk. Add this mix-
ture to the saut and simmer, covered, for 3 minutes. Serve over a bed of
cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
1 pinch cinnamon
2 Tbsps fresh corn - cut
2-5 tofu cutlets (prefried)
1 whole orange - juiced
1/4 cup pineapple juice
1 tsp cornstarch (or arrowroot powder)
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
2 Tbsps brewed coffee (strong)
2 Tbsps coconut milk
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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The joe Hercu|es
This super charged, high protein
saut is centered around a 12 ounce
burger patty that's stuffed with
veggies, and simmered in an herb
sauce with shredded vegetab|es.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup mixed: onions, bell peppers, mushrooms - minced
1/2 tsp garlic clove - minced
1 tsp cajun spice blend
12 ozs TVP burger blend
3 Tbsps olive oil
3 pinches mixed: thyme, oregano, marjoram and
basil leaf
2 cups mixed: carrots (julienned), onions, leeks,
portabella mushrooms, zucchini,
string beans, & bell peppers - chopped
1/2 cup raw spinach - chopped
1/2 cup raw kale - chopped
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Combine minced veggies and half teaspoon minced garlic with cajun
spice blend, then thoroughly mix into the raw burger. Form burger into a
patty and flatten into an oval shape.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then place the burger patty into the
pan, reduce heat and cover pan.
When one side of patty has browned, flip burger, add herbs, mixed veg-
gies, chopped spinach and kale, broccoli buds, the other half teaspoon of
minced garlic, salt and pepper. Cover pan then continue cooking on low
heat for 5 more minutes.
Add the vegetable stock and tomato puree, cover and simmer 5-7 more
minutes. Finally, add the cornstarch slurry and cook one more minute to
thicken sauce. Serves one or two.
3-4 broccoli buds
1/2 tsp garlic clove - minced
2 pinches mixed: salt & black pepper
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
3 Tbsps tomato puree
1 tsp cornstarch - dissolved in
3 Tbsps cold water
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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The Etruscan
This |ive|y saut combines fresh
Mediterranean vegetab|es with the
sundried tomato 'troscoo Sooce'.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp olive oil
5 slices zucchini
5 pieces carrot - shard cut
1 small portabella mushroom - thick sliced
1 small head broccoli - quartered
5 asparagus spears - 1/3 cut
5 leaves escarole - course chopped
5-10 string beans - trimmed & halved
5 small pieces tofu (prefried)
5 small pieces Perfect Gluten Flank Steak (prefried)
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then fry sliced zucchini pieces on
one side and turn over. Lower heat, then add shard cut carrots and thick
sliced portabella mushrooms. Cover and slow cook 3 minutes.
Toss in a quarter cut broccoli head, asparagus (thats been cut into 3 sec-
tions), coursely chopped escarole leaves, then string beans which have
been trimmed and cut into two pieces. Shake covered pan vigorously (or
stir occasionally) to prevent sticking and burning, and continue cooking
another 3 minutes.
Next add the prefried tofu and gluten steak pieces with handfull of spin-
ach, then cover and cook 3 more minutes. Pour in vegetable stock and
steam down contents, covered, for a few more minutes. Now mix in the
Etruscan sauce. Replace cover and cook 3 more minutes. Toss or stir
saut a little more and serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss
with pasta. Makes one large dinner.
1 handful spinach - fresh
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
3 Tbsps Etruscan Sauce
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Gado Gado
This our restaurant's rendition of a
c|assic Thai dish. A hea|thfu| saut of
vegetab|es, tempeh and tofu in a
spicy peanut sauce.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 bok choy stalks - strip cut
1 Tbsp roasted sesame oil
1 carrot - shard cut
1/4 cup colored bell peppers - thinly slivered
1/4 cup yams (or sweet potatoes) - slivered
1/4 lb package firm tofu - (prefried) - small strip cut
6-8 pieces tempeh (prefried) - 1/2 x 2 strip cut
1/3 cup Vegetable Stock (or water)
5-6 snow peas
3 Tbsps peanuts - shelled
1/3 cup Thai Peanut Sauce
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Cut the bok choy into small wide strips. Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add
oil, stir in bok choy strips, shard cut carrots, thinly slivered peppers and
slivered yam, then reduce heat to medium low and slow fry, covered, for
five minutes.
Pre-fry tofu and tempeh for best results, and then into the saut. Stir fry
the saut for 3 more minutes, add vegetable stock (or water), snow peas
then shelled peanuts. Cover and steam for 2 minutes, then add prepared
sauce. Allow sauce to heat up for a couple of minutes then stir or shake
pan to blend saut ingredients. If you think sauce is too thick, add a little
more stock (or water) to pan.
Place the raw spinach on top of the saut and cover. Simmer three min-
utes until the spinach has wilted considerably, then flip saut so spinach is
now on the bottom. Simmer one minute, then slide entire contents over a
plate of cooked Brown Rice. Serves one or two people.
1 cup raw spinach
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Gar|ic 5esame Tofu
This is a popu|ar saut on our menu
with braised vegetab|es and tofu in a
5outheast Asian sauce with roasted
sesame seeds and gar|ic.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1-2 Tbsps roasted sesame oil
3-4 whole onion hearts
1 small carrot - share cut
4 large slices yam (or sweet potato)
2 slices extra-firm tofu - slab cut & triangled
2 medium mushrooms - sliced
4-5 pieces colored bell pepper - sliced
1 large bok choy stalk - quartered
5-6 snow peas
2 Tbsps mung bean sprouts (optional)
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock (or water)
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then fry the onion hearts, carrot
shards and yams on medium heat for 3 minutes. Cut two 1/4 inch thick
lengthwise slabs from tofu block, then slice diagonally across each slab to
form triangles. Add the four resulting tofu triangles to the saut; carefully
working pieces down to pan surface to enable browning. When tofus
adequately browned, add sliced mushrooms, peppers, and a stalk of bok
choy thats been cut in four squares (quartered). Cover saut pan and
continue cooking on medium heat for 3-5 more minutes. Toss or stir pan
occasionally.
Add vegetable stock (or water), increase heat and steam (to soften con-
tents), then add the prepared sauce. Toss pan a little to blend and heat
the sauce. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
3 Tbsps Garlic Sesame Sauce
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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G|uten Diab|o
This spicy saut with |arge fi||ets of
g|uten steak, tomatoes and lta|ian
herbs is great with rice or pasta.
Adjust the heat range to your taste.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3-5 small colored bell pepper - sliced rounds
1 Tbsp olive oil
3-5 onion hearts
1 Perfect Gluten Flank Steak - chunk sliced
1 carrot - shard cut
1 Tbsp garlic clove - crushed
1 medium portabella mushroom - sliced
2 pinches salt
(as needed) hot peppers (see Hot Pepper Chart) - minced
3 pinches cajun spice blend
1 pinch each: oregano, marjoram, basil
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Carefully slice off small round pieces from bell pepper, then set these
pieces aside.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and saut the onion hearts, then
gradually add sliced pepper rounds, chunk sliced gluten steak, shard cut
carrot, crushed garlic, sliced mushrooms, salt, pinch of minced hot pep-
pers, and other spices. Continue cooking, covered, for 5 more minutes,
then add vegetable stock, spinach leaves, hand crushed stewed tomatoes,
and slant cut asparagus spears. Mix in cornstarch slurry, then continue
cooking for 5 more minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice or
toss with pasta. One large portion.
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1 handful spinach
1/4 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
4 asparagus spears - slant cut
1 tsp cornstarch (mixed with
3 Tbsps cold water)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Gypsy's Fortune
Rugged, fo|k dish with deep f|avor
and energy packed ingredients.
5atisfying and easy to make with
pierogies, seitan and brown gravy.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp soy oil
2 Tbsps onions - chopped
6 potato stuffed Pierogies
(or mixed vegetable)
2 Seitan Supreme medallions - thin sliced
1 pinch thyme
1 pinch salt
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
2 Tbsps Brown Gravy
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and saut onions until translucent,
then throw in pierogies and lower the heat. With tongs or cooking fork,
turn pierogies, to brown on both sides. Thin slice seitan, then fry these
pieces with the sautd onions and pieroqies. Sprinkle in the thyme and
salt.
When everything is well browned, pour in vegetable stock and cover pan.
Keep heat on low and simmer, covered, for 3-5 minutes then add pre-
pared gravy. Cook this for a few more minutes until sauce thickens, then
serve.
The Hispania
Named for its 5panish f|avors and
ingredients. With tofu and g|uten
cut|ets, brown rice and ethnic
vegetab|es, the 'Hispania' is easy to
make.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps olive oil
1/4 cup onion - chopped
2 celery stalks - chopped
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Heat a saut pan (or cast-iron skillet), add oil, and saut chopped onion
and celery. Adjust heat to medium then gradually add sliced carrots,
crushed garlic, salt, spices, diced frying peppers, precooked chickpeas, pit-
ted and sliced olives, capers, thin sliced tofu and gluten steak cutlets.
Cover and slow fry on medium low 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
1 small carrot - sliced rounds
1 tsp garlic clove - crushed
1/2 tsp salt
2 pinches cumin
1-2 tsps spanish paprika
1/2 tsp thyme leaf
2 Italian frying peppers (mildly hot) - diced
2 Tbsps chickpeas - cooked
1/4 cup black olives - pitted & sliced
2 tsps capers
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu - thin sliced cutlets
1/2 Perfect Gluten Flank Steak - thin sliced cutlets
1/4 cup Brown Rice - cooked
1/4 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Next stir in precooked brown rice and hand crushed stewed tomatoes.
Turn up heat and cook 2 minutes. Pour in the vegetable stock, cover and
simmer on low heat 5 more minutes. Serves one or two people.
Hunter's Bounty
A hearty saut with the f|avor of
wood|and things, cooked on a
campfire.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps soy oil
3 Tbsps onions - chopped
1/4 lb package firm tofu - chunk sliced
8 slivers Seitan Supreme steak - chunk sliced
5-10 small cubes tempeh - cubed
5-8 small pieces Perfect Gluten Flank Steak
1 carrot - thin cut shards
3 button mushrooms
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and saut onions and veggie meats
on medium low until browned. When ready, mix in shard cut carrots,
mushrooms, salt, black pepper and thyme, then cover, and continue cook-
ing on low heat setting for 5 more minutes. Next, add vegetable stock and
prepared gravy, then cover and simmer saut 3 more minutes. Serve over
bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta. Makes one large dinner.
1/2 portabella mushroom - sliced
1-2 pinches mixed: salt & black pepper
1/2 tsp thyme leaves
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
3 Tbsps Brown Gravy
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Hungarian Gou|ash
This saut, with cabbage and
potatoes, is typica| of eastern
European cuisine. The addition of
protein rich g|uten and tofu cut|ets
substitute for common|y used meats.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps olive oil
1/4 head white cabbage - chopped
1 large potato - cubed
1 carrot - sliced
1/4 cup onion - chopped
several leaves kale, chard (or spinach) - chopped
5-6 small tofu cutlets - sliced
5 Perfect Gluten Flank Steak cutlets - sliced
3-4 pinches salt
1-2 tsps paprika
2 pinches thyme leaf
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and slowly saut vegetable-based
ingredients. When cabbage and potatoes are adequately cooked, slowly
stir in veggie meats, salt and spices. Cover pan and continue cooking on
low heat, stirring occasionally, for about 10 more minutes. Eventually, add
vegetable stock and simmer for 5 more minutes. Serves one or two peo-
ple.
Hungarian 5ty|e Pierogies
A traditiona| Hungarian saut with
pierogies, spinach and onions. 5erved
with vegan sour cream.
2 pinches cayenne pepper
1/3 cup Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps soy oil
1 medium onion - thin sliced
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and slowly saut onions on medium
heat until they begin to caramelize. Add in pierogies and slow fry them
with the onions until they brown on both sides.
Now place spinach on top of the saut and cover pan. Keep heat low
and steam down spinach. After a few more minutes spinach has wilted
enough to be tossed with the onions and pierogies. Toss until spinach is
well cooked, then slide saut onto a plate. Salt and pepper to taste, and
serve with side of Sour Cream.
6 potato stuffed Pierogies
(or mixed vegetable)
2 cups spinach - fresh
(to taste) salt & black pepper
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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lmam's De|ight
A favorite of ancient Ottoman
roya|ty. With ground soy-based
'beef', vegetab|es and Persian spices,
resting on a bed of brown rice and
gri||ed eggp|ant.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 eggplant
1/2 cup Grill Goddess Sauce
1/4 cup olive oil
1 medium onion - thin sliced
1/2 each: green, yellow, red bell peppers - thin sliced
4 garlic cloves - crushed
1/4 cup leeks - rinsed & chopped
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp black pepper
1 tsp allspice
1/3 tsp cumin
1/4 tsp cardamom
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Slice the eggplant into rounds and marinate them in Grilled Goddess
sauce. After 10 minutes of marinating, the eggplant should be grilled and
set aside. If a grill is not convenient, a grill surfaced saut pan will work.
Heat a large saut pan (or cast-iron skillet), add oil, and saut thinly sliced
onions and peppers for several minutes on medium heat. When onions
become translucent, thoroughly mix in crushed garlic, well cleaned and
chopped leeks, salt, black pepper and spices. Next, form 5 small barrels
with the burger, using wet hands, then place barrels on top of the saut.
Cover and simmer for 5 minutes.
Slice up portabella and gently mix into pan. Cover and simmer 5 more
minutes. Add hand crushed stewed tomatoes, dill and vegetable stock,
2 pinches cayenne pepper
8-10 ozs TVP burger blend
1 portabella mushroom - sliced
1/3 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
1/2 tsp dill
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1 cup Brown Rice
1 tsp cornstarch (mixed with
3 Tbsps cold water)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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then continue simmering for 5 more minutes, stirring occasionally. Mix in
the cornstarch slurry to thicken juices, then layer the grilled eggplant
pieces over cooking saut, and put cover back on. Simmer 2 more min-
utes.
To serve, make a bed of cooked Brown Rice on a plate. Use tongs to pick
up steamed eggplant and place pieces on the rice. Now slide the rest of
the saut contents over the eggplant. Serves one or two.
lndian Vegetab|e Curry
This f|avorfu| saut incorporates the
cu|inary principa|s of Heaven and
Earth. Combining deep-earth root
vegetab|es, such as potatoes, yams
and turnips, with surface vegetab|es,
|ike peas and peppers, and the
highest growing food...coconuts.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup mixed: green, yellow, red bell peppers - round cut
1 Tbsp soy oil
1/4 cup onion - chopped
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Carefully slice off small round pieces from each bell pepper, then set these
pieces aside.
1/2 large turnip - sliced
4 large slices yam (or sweet potato) - sliced
1 parsnip - large round slices
4 large slices potato
4 thin slices rutabaga
1 carrot - thin sliced
3 Tbsps water (for steaming)
4-5 string beans - trimmed & slant cut
3-4 cauliflowerettes
2 Tbsps chickpeas - cooked
2 pinches salt
1-2 tsps curry powder
1/3 cup Vegetable Stock
3-4 broccoli buds
1/4 cup peas
1/4 cup coconut milk
1 tsp raw sugar
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Heat a large saut pan (or cast-iron skillet), add oil, and saut chopped
onions with other root vegetables. Stir fry three minutes, on medium
heat, tossing occasionally. Add the water and cover to steam saut con-
tents for 5 minutes.
Next toss in the round sliced bell peppers, trimmed and slant cut string
beans, cauliflowerettes and precooked chickpeas. Stir fry another three
minutes, then add salt and curry powder, toss a little more, then pour in
vegetable stock, mix in broccoli buds, peas, coconut milk and raw sugar.
Reduce heat, cover and simmer until all root veggies are soft. Serves one
or two people, when placed over a bed of cooked Brown Rice, or basmati
rice.
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jamaican jung|e
This mea| transports you to jamaica,
with braised, |arge cut vegetab|es,
tofu and seitan, simmered in a spicy
sauce.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and saut large shard cut carrot,
onion hearts and yam slices on medium heat, covered for 3-5 minutes,
shaking pan to prevent burning. Add sliced peppers, chunk sliced tofu
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp soy oil
1 carrot - large cut shards
2 large onion hearts
1/2 yam (or sweet potato) - large slices
1/2 each: yellow, green, red bell peppers - sliced
1/4 lb package firm tofu (prefried or raw) - chunk sliced
5 large pieces Basic Seitan
3 Tbsps water (for steaming)
1/4 cup Jamaican Jungle Sauce
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(prefried or raw) and seitan pieces, then cover and fry another three min-
utes.
Turn up heat and add a small amount of water. Steam contents soft by
continuing to add small amounts of water while using medium-high heat.
When yams are soft enough, stir in Jamaican Jungle sauce. Shake pan to
mix thoroughly and heat up. Cover and simmer 3 minutes on low heat.
Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice.
jamba|aya
This authentic Cajun stew is |oaded
with f|avor and nutrition. Ref|ects the
high|ights of a night on the Bayou.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 potato - parboiled & chopped
2 Tbsps soy oil
1/2 small onion - chopped
1/2 cup colored bell peppers - chopped
1/2 tsp garlic clove - crushed
1/2 carrot - thin sliced rounds
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Chop up and parboil potatoes, then set aside.
Heat a large saut pan (or cast-iron skillet), add oil, then saut onion
slices, chopped bell peppers, salt and spices. Stir fry on medium heat for
3 minutes, then add chopped up parboiled potatoes, crushed garlic, thinly
sliced carrot, jalapeno pepper(s), chunks of prepared veggie meats, sliced
zucchini and flour. Cover and cook on medium heat for 5 more minutes,
stirring occasionally. When ready, stir in vegetable stock, wine and tomato
puree, then simmer 5 more minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown
Rice.
1/2-2 jalapeno peppers
(to taste) salt
1/2 tsp thyme leaf
1-2 tsps cajun spice blend
1/2 cup mixed: tofu, tempeh, gluten, seitan - chunked
3 slices zucchini
2 Tbsps whole wheat flour
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
2 Tbsps white wine
3 Tbsps tomato puree
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Leonardo's Vision
Pierogies, tofu cut|ets, asparagus
spears and brocco|i tips in a vegan
white sauce, with me|ted vegan
mozzare||a cheese. ln honor of
Leonardo da Vinci, a vegetarian
genius!
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp olive oil
1 tsp garlic clove - diced
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
4 potato stuffed Pierogies
(or mixed vegetable)
5-6 tofu cutlets (prefried)
1 cup broccoli buds
6 asparagus spears - slant cut
1/4 cup basic White Sauce
2 ozs soy mozzarella cheese - grated
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, and fry the diced garlic until it starts
to brown, then add the vegetable stock. Remove the garlic by straining off
liquid. Steam the pierogies and tofu cutlets in the strained stock for 3
minutes, covered, on medium low heat. Next add the broccoli buds, slant
cut asparagus spears, then mix in prepared sauce and grated cheese.
Continue heating for a few more minutes, then shake pan to blend and
serve.
Mediterranean Pasta Toss
This de|ightfu| saut makes a great
mea|, with p|enty of f|avor and
nutrition.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4-5 sundried tomatoes - mixed with
1/4 cup soaking water
2 Tbsps olive oil
1/2 small onion - chopped
1/4 cup carrot - thin sliced rounds
1/2 cup colored bell pepper - sliced
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Put the sundried tomatoes in a small sauce pan with enough water to just
cover the tomatoes, then bring contents to a boil. Reduce heat and sim-
mer for 3 minutes, covered. Remove from heat and let steep for another 5
minutes, then drain away most of the the soaking water, retaining a 1/4
cup of soaking water with tomatoes.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then saut the chopped onions and
sliced carrots for 3 minutes, then gradually add sliced bell peppers, sliced
1 cup cauliflower - sliced
1 cup string beans - trimmed & slant cut
1/4 cup yam (or sweet potato) - thin slivers
1/4 cup chickpeas - cooked
1/2 cup tofu - cubed
1/2 lemon - juiced
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
2 pinches salt
2 pinches cumin
1 pinch powdered thyme
1/2 cup peas - frozen
1 Tbsp fresh dill - chopped
2 cups penne pasta - cooked
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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cauliflower, trimmed and slant cut string beans, slivered yam slices, pre-
cooked chickpeas, cubed tofu, prepared sundried tomatoes with a 1/4 cup
of their soaking water, one-half juiced lemon and vegetable stock, then
cover and simmer on low heat for 4-5 minutes.
Add salt and spices, peas and dill. Increase heat and stir fry for 3 minutes.
Add precooked pasta, toss another 2 minutes and serve.
Neptune's Gift
For seafood |overs, this tofu
preparation is reminiscent of a white
fish saut with |emon and herbs.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
5-6 whole baby red potatoes - unpeeled & parboiled
2 Tbsps soy margarine
2 onion hearts
1 lb package extra-firm tofu - fillet cut
1/3 cup Vegetable Stock
1 Tbsp lemon juice
1 tsp salt
2 pinches black pepper
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Select smallest (baby) size potatoes. Parboil unpeeled and whole, then set
aside.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add margarine and onion hearts.
Slice the tofu into thin, long fillet shaped pieces, then fry with onion
hearts, on low heat. Using a cooking fork, tongs or other utensil, carefully
turn and brown each fillet.
When tofu is adequately seared, pour in vegetable stock and lemon juice,
then stir in salt, black pepper, herbs, and prepared potatoes. Place sea-
weed (in one piece) over saut mixture, then cover pan and simmer for 3
minutes. Remove seaweed, add slivered veggies, snap peas and continue
cooking, covered, for 3-5 more minutes. Finally add cornstarch slurry and
shake pan to blend. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice, or with a
side of Pilaf.
1 pinch each: thyme, marjoram, rosemary, tarragon
6 inch sheet wakame seaweed (or dulse seaweed)
1 cup mixed: carrots, cucumber, kale, zucchini - slivered
4-5 fresh snap peas
1 tsp cornstarch (mixed with
3 Tbsps cold water)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Newtons Law
Named in honor of lsaac Newton,
father of modern physics and
ca|cu|us...who was a|so a vegetarian!
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Perfect Gluten Flank Steak - thick sliced
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/4 cup soy milk
1/2 cup bread crumbs
2 Tbsps soy oil
1/4 cup each: portabella mushroom, zucchini,
onion, carrot, and asparagus - slivered
1 pinch salt
1 pinch thyme leaf
2 pinches cajun spice blend
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
1 tsp cornstarch (mixed with
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Thick slice steak into 3-4 pieces and bread by dredging in flour, soy milk
and then bread crumbs. Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then brown
gluten steak pieces. Pour off excess oil, then add slivered veggies, salt,
herbs and spices. Cover and steam contents on low heat for 5 minutes,
then add vegetable stock, cover again and continue cooking for 3 more
minutes. Stir in cornstarch slurry and thicken. Serve as main course with
side dishes.
The O|ympian
A favorite dish of the Gods. With
bright mediterranean vegetab|es,
festive herbs and spices, tender
morse|s of g|uten and tofu, and a
de|icious citrus sauce.
3 Tbsps cold water)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps sundried tomatoes - soaked & chopped
1 Tbsp olive oil
2 Tbsps red onion - chopped
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5-10 slices yam (or sweet potato) - sliver cut
5 carrot - shard cut
1/4 cup mixed: red, yellow, green bell peppers - diced
1/4 cup tofu - cubed
1/4 cup Perfect Gluten Flank Steak - chopped
1 tsp garlic cloves - crushed
5 thin slices zucchini
1/4 cup eggplant - diced
1/4 cup string beans - chopped
1/4 cup cauliflower tips
1/4 cup broccoli buds
1/4 cup asparagus tips
3 Tbsps black olives - pitted & sliced
2 pinches salt
2 pinches cumin
1/4 tsp allspice
2 pinches coriander
2 pinches thyme leaf
1/2 orange (for squeezing over saut mix)
1 Tbsp lemon juice
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Put the sundried tomatoes in a small sauce pan with enough water to just
cover the tomatoes, then bring contents to a boil. Reduce heat and sim-
mer for 3 minutes, covered. Remove from heat and let steep for another 5
minutes before draining and use.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then begin frying the chopped
onions. In two minutes add the thinly sliced yam, shard cut carrots, diced
peppers, cubed tofu and chopped gluten steak. Simmer, covered, on
medium heat for five minutes then toss in the crushed garlic, sliced zuc-
chini, diced eggplant, prepared sundried tomatoes, chopped string beans,
cauliflower tips, broccoli buds,asparagus tips, pitted and sliced olives, salt,
herbs and spices. Simmer on low heat, covered, for 5 more minutes.
Squeeze the orange over the saut, then add the lemon juice. Increase
heat and stir or shake pan. After a minute or two, stir in cornstarch-vege-
table stock slurry, while bringing saut to a boil, then immediately lower
heat and simmer for 2 more minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown
Rice or toss with pasta.
1 Tbsp cornstarch - dissolved in
1/ 4 cup cold Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Orienta| 5tir Fry
A potpourri of thin|y s|iced
vegetab|es, stir fried with de|icious
Orienta| f|avors. Expand this recipe-
for-one and create dinner for the
who|e fami|y.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 tsp roasted sesame oil
1 small carrot - thin slice strips
1/2 cup colored bell peppers - thin slice strips
1/2 small leeks -washed & thin slice strips
3 asparagus spears - thin slice strips
2 bok choy stalks - thin slice strips
1/2 small zucchini - thin slice strips
3 nappa stalks - thin slice strips
2 mushrooms - thin slice strips
1 thin sliver ginger root
2 pinches garlic clove - crushed
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Thinly slice carrots, bell peppers, well washed leeks, asparagus spears,
bok choy, zucchini, nappa, mushrooms, into long strips and set aside.
Heat a saut pan (frying pan or wok), add oil, then saut crushed garlic
and minced ginger root. Toss pan (or stir) a moment then add the thinly
sliced strips of carrot, bell peppers and well washed leeks. Add a third of
the tamari and a third of the water, cover pan and steam rapidly on high
heat for one minute.
Now add the broccoli, asparagus spears, bok choy, zucchini, nappa, kale,
spinach and mushrooms. Add another third of the remaining tamari and
water, then toss (or stir) in cover pan. Reduce heat a little and combine
the snow peas, sprouts, the rest of the tamari and water. Steam a few
minutes then slowly stir in cornstarch slurry. Toss pan as juices rapidly
1/4 cup water
3 Tbsps Tamari sauce
6 broccoli buds
1/2 cup mixed: kale & spinach leaves
5-10 snow peas
1/4 cup fresh bean sprouts
1 tsp cornstarch (mixed with
3 Tbsps cold water)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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thicken. Remove from heat and immediately serve over a bed of cooked
Brown Rice, or toss with pasta.
Pasta Primavera
This stir fried saut features a variety
of sma|| cut vegetab|es, gar|ic, herbs
and tomato, tossed with pasta.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp olive oil
1/4 onion - thin sliced
2 Tbsps carrots - julienned
1/4 each: red, yellow, green bell peppers - thin sliced
1 Tbsp garlic clove - crushed
2 pinches salt
1 pinch black pepper
2 pinches each: oregano, marjoram, basil
4 string beans - trimmed & chopped
3 asparagus spears - chopped
5-6 small broccoli buds
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Heat a saut pan (frying pan or wok), add oil, then saut chopped onions,
julienned carrots and thinly sliced peppers. Stir fry 2-3 minutes, then add
crushed garlic, salt, black pepper and herbs. After a minute - with the
exception of the tomatoes - combine all other vegetables, sliced mush-
rooms, precooked chick peas, pitted and sliced black olives, and pignolis
nuts. Return cover to pan and continue stir frying, with a tossing motion,
on medium heat for 3-5 more minutes.
Next, pour in the wine, shake pan to distribute, then add vegetable stock
and cover. Simmer on low heat for 2 minutes and then add hand crushed
stewed tomatoes. Cover and simmer for another 3 minutes, then add
pasta over top of stir fried mix, cover again and simmer for 2 more min-
1/2 small zucchini - thin sliced
1/4 portabella mushroom - thin sliced
1-2 mushrooms - sliced
2 Tbsps chickpeas - cooked
5-6 black olives - pitted & sliced
2 Tbsps pignoli nuts
2 Tbsps white wine
3 Tbsps Vegetable Stock
1/4 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
1 cup penne pasta - cooked
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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utes. Uncover, toss saute with precooked pasta and serve immediately.
The Pau| Bunyon
This pan fried steak-burger, with
mushroom gravy is supercharged
with protein, and rich in f|avor.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps onions - minced
3 Tbsps colored bell peppers - minced
1 tsp garlic clove - minced
3 Tbsps mushrooms - minced
1-2 tsps cajun spice blend
8-10 oz TVP burger blend - ground
1/4 cup soy oil
1/2 cup mushrooms - sliced
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
3 Tbsps Brown Gravy
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Mash the minced onions, bell peppers, garlic and mushrooms, then -
using your hands - thoroughly mix this mash with the cajun spice and
ground burger, then flatten to form a steak-burger. Heat a cast-iron skillet
(or frying pan) and add the oil. Place the patty into the heated pan then
lower the heat, replace cover, and cook 3 minutes to brown.
Flip the steak-burger, and cook 2 more minutes. Add the sliced mush-
rooms, cover and fry 3 more minutes until mushrooms cook down.
Pour in vegetable stock, increase heat a little and cover again. In a
minute or two, add prepared gravy and cook another minute to heat all
contents thoroughly. Slide off pan onto a plate and voila! The Paul Bun-
yon.
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Penne A|fredo Toss
Here is an easy pasta dish you can
whip up in a|most no time. Use the
A|fredo 5auce recipe to comp|ete
this simp|e dish.
Steam the broccoli and prefried gluten steak with the vegetable stock on
low heat, covered. Mix in prepared sauce and cover to heat up sauce.
Throw in cold precooked noodles, cover again and continue cooking over
low heat. Uncover after two minutes, toss and serve.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
6-10 broccoli buds
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1/4 cup Alfredo Sauce
6-10 small pieces Perfect Gluten Flank Steak (prefried)
1 cup penne pasta (cold) - cooked
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Pierogie lta|ia
A de|icious saut, with potato
stuffed pierogies, brocco|i and other
vegetab|es, in a |ight sauce, f|avored
with gar|ic and lta|ian herbs.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps olive oil
1 small portabella mushroom - quartered
4 potato stuffed Pierogies
(or mixed vegetables)
1 pinch salt
1 large pinch each: oregano, marjoram, basil
1 tsp garlic clove - crushed
1 small head broccoli - quartered
5-6 string beans - trimmed & half cut
5 asparagus spears - slant cut
1 handful spinach - fresh
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Heat a saut pan (or frying pan), add half the olive oil, then fry mushroom
pieces, covered, for about two minutes. Next, add the other tablespoon of
olive oil, pierogies, salt, herbs and crushed garlic. Using low heat, cover
pan, and lightly brown pierogies, occasionally turning pierogies to brown
all sides.
After pierogies are well browned, toss in sliced up broccoli head, trimmed
and half cut string beans, slant cut asparagus and spinach. Cover pan
and slow cook this for 4-5 minutes on low heat. Next, add the cornstarch-
vegetable stock slurry. Simmer another 5 minutes on medium low heat, to
thicken the sauce, then slide contents onto a plate and serve.
1 Tbsp cornstarch - dissolved in
1/3 cup cold Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Po|ynesian Tofu &
Vegetab|es
This saut de|ivers the warmth and
co|or of the 5outh Pacific, with
vegetab|es, tofu and pineapp|e, in a
sweet and sour sauce.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp roasted sesame oil
3 bok choy stalks - large sliced
1/4 cup carrots - julienned
1/4 cup yam (or sweet potato) - julienned
1/2 green banana (or plantain) - sliced
6 string beans - trimmed & length split
5 tofu cutlets (prefried) - cubed
1/4 cup pineapple - chunked
3 Tbsps water (for steaming)
1/4 cup Polynesian Sauce
5-10 snow peas
1/4 cup mung bean sprouts
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then stir fry large slices of bok choy,
julienned carrots and yams, first. After a minute or two, add the sliced
plantain, trimmed and length split string beans, cubed tofu (prefried),
chunks of pineapple, and a couple of tablespoons water, then cover and
steam for a few more minutes. Now add prepared sauce, snow peas and
sprouts. Shake or stir in sauce, reduce heat and cover pan. Cook con-
tents for 2 minutes, then serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice.
Ratatou||i
With origins in southern France, this
is a we|| known vegetab|e stew.
Large cut garden vegetab|es
high|ight this dish.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3 Tbsps olive oil
1 medium onion - chunk chopped
1 tsp salt
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp garlic clove - crushed
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, large pieces of a chopped onions,
then stir in salt and oregano. After a few minutes gradually stir in crushed
garlic, cubed eggplant, chopped vegetables and mushrooms. Cover and
cook on low heat for five minutes. Combine hand crushed stewed toma-
toes and simmer contents for 10 minutes. Serve as a stew with fresh
bread on the side.
1/2 eggplant - cubed
1 small zucchini - chunk chopped
1 small summer squash - chunk chopped
1 green bell pepper - chopped
1 red bell pepper - chopped
5 button mushrooms
1/3 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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5eitan 5troganoff
Mode|ed after the traditiona| Russian
c|assic, with seitan s|ices and
mushrooms in a creamy brown gravy.
Hearty and de|icious.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp soy oil
2 Tbsps onions - chopped
1-2 pinches salt
1 pinch black pepper
2 pinches thyme leaf
4-5 slices Seitan Supreme or
Basic Seitan medallions - thin sliced
6 mushrooms - sliced
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
2 Tbsps Sour Cream
2 Tbsps Brown Gravy
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then fry the chopped onions with
salt, black pepper and thyme. As onions begin to caramelize, toss in thin
sliced pieces of seitan and brown with the onions.
When seitan is sufficiently seared, add in sliced mushrooms, replace cover
and cook on low heat. Toss pan and fry for several minutes, then add veg-
etable stock and bring to a boil. Mix in sour cream and simmer 2 more
minutes. Finally, thoroughly mix in prepared gravy, and serve over a bed
of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
5ingapore 5unset
With the co|or of the Pacific sunset,
and f|avor of the 5outh 5eas, this
tasty saut combines |arge cut
vegetab|es, meaty seitan and tofu, in
a 5outheast Asian citrus sauce.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 each: green, red, yellow bell peppers - sliced rounds
1 Tbsp roasted sesame oil
2 large onion hearts
1/2 large carrot - shard cut
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Carefully slice off small round pieces from each bell pepper, then set these
pieces aside.
Heat a saut pan (or skillet), add oil, then fry onions hearts. When onion
hearts are lightly seared, throw in sliced bell pepper rounds, shard cut car-
rot pieces and large slices of portabella mushroom. Continue searing
saut contents on medium-high heat. Add a small amount of water, then
replace cover. Periodically toss pan contents, while steaming for 5 more
minutes.
Next add large slices of wedge cut tofu and seitan (both prefried), broccoli
buds, a tablespoon of water, then replace cover, and continue steaming
for another 3-5 minutes. Add prepared sauce, then heat blend for 2 more
minutes while tossing pan contents to blend. Serves one large dinner over
a bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
3 Tbsps water (for steaming)
1/4 lb package firm tofu (prefried) - large wedge cut
2 Seitan Supreme, or Basic Seitan medallions
(prefried)- cut into 4-5 wedges
3-4 broccoli buds
1/2 portabella mushroom - large sliced
1/4 cup Singapore Sunset Sauce
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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5outhern Comfort
With tofu, carrots, brocco|i and peas,
this me||ow saut de|ivers o|d
fashioned 5outhern f|avor.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps olive oil
1 carrot - shard cut
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu
1 pinch salt
2 pinches powdered thyme
3-5 broccoli buds
1/4 cup peas - frozen
1/2 orange - juiced
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1 tsp cornstarch - dissolved in
3 Tbsps water
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil and carrot shards. Stir fry car-
rots for two minutes on medium-high heat, then add small wedge cut
pieces of tofu. Brown tofu for several minutes, while tossing pan occa-
sionally to prevent burning. When tofu pieces are partially browned, sea-
son saut mix with salt and thyme.
Next, squeeze juice from the orange over saut contents, add broccoli
buds and peas, then pour in the vegetable stock and replace cover. Cook
on low heat for 3 more minutes, then thicken with the cornstarch slurry
and serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
Teriyaki Tofu
An easy stir fry, using tofu and thin|y
s|iced vegetab|es. Use the de|icious
teriyaki sauce to comp|ete this
recipe.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 bok choy stalks - thin strip cut
1/4 red bell pepper - thin strip cut
1 carrot - thin strip cut
1/2 portabella mushroom cap - thin strip cut
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Slice bok choy, red pepper, carrot and portabella mushroom into thin
strips. Cut tofu into small cubes or small cutlets
Heat up a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil, then gradually stir in the
thinly sliced vegetables and portabella mushrooms, cubed (or small
sliced) tofu, broccoli buds, and snow peas. Stir fry on medium heat for
several minutes until tofu browns a little, then add two tablespoons of
water and steam, covered, for 3 minutes. Add prepared teriyaki sauce,
then stir fry 2 more minutes to heat up mixture. Mix contents well, and if
necessary, add only a tablespoon or two more of water. Serve over a bed
of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu - cubed
1 Tbsp roasted sesame oil
4-5 broccoli buds
4-5 snow peas
2 Tbsps water (for steaming)
1/4 cup Teriyaki Sauce
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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The Thomas Edison
Named for the famous vegetarian
inventor. Featuring hearty seitan in
a deep brown sauce, with s|ivered
carrots, portabe||a mushrooms,
onion hearts, and brocco|i buds.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps soy oil
3-4 Seitan Supreme medallions - half cut
1 carrot - sliver cut
1/2 portabella mushroom cap - thin sliced
3 onion hearts
5-8 broccoli buds
1 pinch salt
1 pinch thyme leaf
2 pinches cajun spice blend
2 Tbsps Tamari sauce
2 Tbsps cornstarch - dissolved in
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Heat up a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil, throw in onion hearts and
half cut seitan chunks, reduce heat to a medium setting and saut until
seitan is well seared. Next, add sliver cut carrot, replace cover and peri-
odically toss saut mix while cooking for 2 more minutes, then add thin
sliced portabella mushroom. Replace pan cover and simmer for 2 more
minutes, add broccoli buds and cover. Cook two more minutes then
slowly stir in salt, herbs, spices, tamari and cornstarch-vegetable stock
slurry. Simmer another 3-5 minutes to thicken the sauce and serve over a
bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
Tofu Cacciatore
This saut demonstrates pre-f|ouring
and prefrying of tofu, which can
produce a c|assic sty|ed vea|, chicken
or fish.
1/4 cup cold Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu - thin sliced
(as needed) whole wheat flour - for dredging
1/4 cup olive oil
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Slice the half block of tofu into 8-10 thin pieces, carefully dredge pieces in
the flour. Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil. Brown both sides
of thin sliced tofu in the preheated oil. Remove browned tofu pieces, then
drain on paper towels.
Pour off most of the oil, then, with the exception of the tomatoes, saut all
vegetables with salt and seasoning for a few minutes. Return the browned
tofu pieces back to the pan, then lightly toss mixture for two more min-
utes. Add the wine, toss again, then pour in the vegetable stock. Cover
pan and continue cooking on medium heat for 3 more minutes. Finally
add the hand crushed stewed tomatoes, replace cover and cook 3 more
minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
3 Tbsps onions - chopped
2 large mushrooms - sliced
1 Tbsp each: red, yellow and green bell peppers - chopped
2 pinches salt
1 pinch each: oregano, marjoram, basil and black pepper
2 Tbsps white wine
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1/4 cup Stewed Tomatoes - hand crushed
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Tofu Dijon
A de|ightfu| saut, made with
vegetab|es, tofu, in a white wine and
mustard sauce...reminiscent of the
French countryside.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp soy oil
2-3 onion hearts
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu - chunk sliced
1 Tbsp soy margarine
1/2 large portabella mushroom - sliced
1 small head broccoli - quartered
5-8 string beans - trimmed & half cut
5-6 asparagus spears - slant cut
2 Tbsps dijon mustard
2 pinches salt
1 pinch black pepper
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil, add onion hearts and fry on
medium setting for 2-3 minutes, then add chunk sliced tofu pieces and
margarine. Continue frying until tofu pieces begin to brown, then add
sliced portabella mushroom. Return cover, then simmer on low heat for 5
minutes. Next add a quarter cut head of broccoli, trimmed and half cut
string beans, and slant cut asparagus spears. Return cover and fry a few
minutes more.
Add the dijon mustard, salt, black pepper, seasonings and wine to sau-
ting mix, then toss contents to spread the mustard. Stir in cornstarch-
vegetable stock slurry, then return cover, reduce heat and continue slow
cooking for 3-5 more minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked Brown Rice or
toss with pasta.
1 pinch thyme leaf
1 pinch tarragon
1/4 cup white wine
1 Tbsp cornstarch - dissolved in
1/4 cup cold Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Tofu Marsa|a
Though very simi|ar to our lta|ian
Cacciatore saut, this recipe features
a de|icious Marsa|a wine sauce.
Slice the half block of tofu into 8-10 thin pieces, then carefully dredge
pieces in the flour. Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil. Brown
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu - thin sliced
(as needed) whole wheat flour - for dredging
1/4 cup olive oil
3 Tbsps onions - chopped
2 large mushrooms - sliced
1 Tbsp each: red, yellow and green bell peppers - chopped
2 pinches salt
1 pinch each: oregano, marjoram, basil and black pepper
1/4 cup marsala wine
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
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both sides of sliced tofu in the preheated oil. Remove browned tofu
pieces, then drain on paper towels.
Pour off most of the oil, then saut all vegetables with salt and seasoning
for a few minutes. Return the browned tofu pieces back to the pan, then
lightly toss mixture for two more minutes. Add marsala wine, toss again,
then pour in the vegetable stock. Cover pan and continue cooking on
medium heat for 3 more minutes. Finally, sprinkle in a teaspoon of flour,
replace cover and cook 3 more minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked
Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
Tofu 5ca||oppine
Another in the series of lta|ian tofu
sauts. This one uses of white
wine and |emon, to create a
wonderfu| |emon-herb sauce.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 lb package extra-firm tofu - thin sliced
(as needed) whole wheat flour - for dredging
1/4 cup olive oil
3 Tbsps onions - chopped
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Slice the half block of tofu into 8-10 thin pieces, then carefully dredge
pieces in the flour. Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add the oil. Brown
both sides of sliced tofu in the preheated oil. Remove browned tofu
pieces, then drain on paper towels.
Pour off most of the oil, then saut all vegetables with salt, black pepper
and seasoning for a few minutes. Return the browned tofu pieces back to
the pan, squeeze lemon juice over saut contents, slice up rind and add to
mix, then lightly toss mixture for two more minutes. Add white wine, toss
again, then pour in the vegetable stock. Cover pan and continue cooking
on medium heat for 3 more minutes. Finally, sprinkle in a teaspoon of
flour, replace cover and cook 3 more minutes. Serve over a bed of cooked
Brown Rice or toss with pasta.
2 large mushrooms - sliced
1 Tbsp each: red, yellow and green bell peppers - chopped
2 pinches salt
1 pinch each: oregano, marjoram and black pepper
1/2 lemon - juiced & sliced rind
1/4 cup white wine
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Tuscan Toss
This recipe tru|y brings out the f|avor
of Northern lta|y, with its
combination of vegetab|es, pasta,
and herbs.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps olive oil
1/2 medium onion - thin sliced
1/2 each: green, red and yellow bell peppers - thin sliced
1 pinch each: salt, black pepper,
thyme leaf, oregano & marjoram
2-3 garlic cloves - sliced
1 large portabella mushroom cap - thin sliced
1 small head broccoli - quarter cut
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
1/2 cup cooked pasta
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and add oil, then begin frying thinly sliced
onions and peppers. Cover pan, reduce heat and cook for 3 minutes.
At this point, gradually combine salt, pepper, herbs, sliced garlic and thinly
sliced portabella mushroom into saut mix, then return cover and simmer
for 3 more minutes. Next, cut the broccoli head into quarters and add
these to the saut, cover and continue to simmer for another 3 minutes.
Next, pour in half of the vegetable stock, cover, increase heat and braise
saut in stock for 3 more minutes. This process quickly steams down the
mixture, while adding flavor.
Now, pour in remaining vegetable stock and repeat the braising process.
At the end of this period, add the pasta, cover and steam for 30 more sec-
onds. Finally, uncover pan and toss the saut with the pasta. Serve at
once.
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The Westerner
With a|| the majesty and promise of
the great outdoors...
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Perfect Gluten Flank Steak
1/3 cup Grill Goddess Sauce
1/3 cup Basic Barbecue Sauce
1/3 cup A-1 sauce
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
1 cup mixed: onions, carrots, asparagus spears,
zucchini & portabella mushroom -
all sliver sliced
1 Tbsp soy oil
1 tsp cornstarch - dissolved in
3 Tbsps water
(to taste) salt & black pepper
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Begin by grilling off gluten steak on medium-high temperature, basting
several times with a combined glaze, made from equal parts of Grill God-
dess, Barbecue and A-1 sauces. Baste several times, until steak is done.
When finished, place steak in a bowl (or other container) with 1/4 cup of
vegetable stock and a small amount of the remaining glaze combination.
Allow steak to marinate for several minutes.
Sliver slice all vegetables and portabella mushroom. Heat a saut pan (or
skillet) and add oil, then toss in slivered vegetables and mushroom slices
and saut on medium-high heat for about 5 minutes.
Pour remaining 1/4 cup of stock in saut and simmer, covered, for 3 min-
utes. Remove cover and stir in cornstarch slurry to thicken saut juices.
Next, place grilled steak on top of saut mix. Return cover, then simmer 2
more minutes. Finally, slide entire contents of saut over a bed of cooked
Brown Rice. Salt and pepper to taste. Makes one large portion.
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Breads & Doughs
Introduction What is more real than the appearance
and odor of fresh baked bread? If you are
lucky enough to have been born in the
1950s or earlier in America, you might
share some fond childhood memories of
Moms fresh baked bread. Unfortunately,
today, breadmaking is fast becoming a lost
art form that has been relegated to the
professional bakery. This gradual erosion
of this basic family practice - which had
been passed down through the genera-
tions - may be linked to some core funda-
mental social problems that plague our
country today. Acquiring the skills of
bread making instills a sort of confidence
and joy that only a baker can truly appreci-
ate.
What we will discover in this chapter is that
working with dough is easy, economical
and extremely versatile. You will learn how
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to create breads of almost infinite variety
through working out a few simple recipes.
Dinner rolls, biscuits and buns are concisely
described, providing you with an arsenal of
tasty accompaniments. Several basic dough
recipes used for pizzas, pierogies, dumplings
and veggie pockets are covered in this chap-
ter. Breakfast pastries such as pancakes,
crepes and coffee cake are included here as
well.
The recipes in this chapter are simple and
concise. Like all the recipes in this book,
those included in this chapter are intended to
provide the reader with reliable instructions
and advice. The recipes are basic and funda-
mental, supplying the reader with a spring-
board for more elaborate designs. There are
many secrets and revelations about bread
making that can only be discovered through
immersing oneself in the process. Working
with the recipes in this chapter will enable
you to become adept at several categories of
bread making.
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There are many mixed opinions circulating, in
todays media, about the benefits - or haz-
ards - of consuming wheat products. It must
be made clear that wheat and bread have
been the Staff of Life of western civilization,
for thousands of years. The modern Ameri-
can diet, rich in dairy and animal flesh, is
about as unhealthy a diet for an entire culture
as has ever existed on this planet. Adulter-
ated and heavily processed breads have
replaced the hearty whole grain breads our
ancestors consumed. Couple this with the
consumption of processed sugars and chemi-
cals and you have the stage set for sickness
and death.
Learn to bake with vegan ingredients. The
results are excellent as long as one follows
the simple rules outlined in this chapter and
this book. The benefits to your life from mak-
ing and consuming this food will rapidly
become apparent. The positive ripples that
you create in this universe from your act of
vegan baking are immeasurable.
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Baking Powder Biscuits
Those F|aky, moist biscuits made
fresh from a hot oven have been a
favorite in this country since co|onia|
times.
Sift and combine the flour, salt and baking powder together. Cut the mar-
garine into the dry ingredients until mixture is granulated. Stir in the soy
milk quickly - but gently - to prevent excessive development of gluten.
Turn the dough onto a floured board and roll out to a thickness of about a
quarter of an inch. Cut with a floured, round cookie cutter, 2 to 3 inch
discs. Bake biscuits on a greased baking pan in a preheated 450F oven
for 12-15 minutes. Serve immediately with gravy or room temperature
margarine.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups unbleached pastry flour
(or whole wheat pastry flour)
1 tsp salt
2 & 1/2 tsps baking powder
1/4 cup soy margarine (at room temperature)
3/4-1 cup soy milk
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Corn Bread
Comp|ete|y vegan, with a|| the f|avor
of traditiona| corn bread recipes.
Mix together corn meal, flour, baking powder and salt, and set aside.
Next, beat together soy milk, melted margarine, molasses and raw sugar.
Pour the wet ingredients into the bowl with the dry ingredients and fold
mixture while turning the bowl. When well mixed, pour batter into a
greased baking pan and bake 20-25 minutes at 425F.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/2 cups yellow corn meal
1 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
2 & 1/2 tsps baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 cup soy milk
1/2 cup soy margarine
2 Tbsps molasses
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
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Croissants
Croissants are French puff pastry
de|icacies. Here is a recipe for
comp|ete|y vegan croissants with a||
the f|avor of the traditiona| version.
Stir the salt into the flour and set aside.
Heat the soy milk to about 110F and mix in the yeast and sugar. When
the yeast has risen and the liquid has a foam on top, add the oil to the liq-
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 tsp salt
2 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1 cup soy milk - preheated to 110F
1 Tbsp active dry yeast
1 Tbsp raw sugar
1 Tbsp soy oil
1 cup soy margarine - melted
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uid, then mix the liquid and salted-flour mix. Knead resulting dough, and
set aside, covered for about 45 minutes.
Punch down the expanded dough and knead until it becomes smooth and
elastic, then cover the dough and refrigerate for half an hour. When set,
remove dough and turn onto a floured board. Roll dough out into an
oblong a quarter of an inch thick. Using a pastry brush, paint on melted
(not warmer than 70F) margarine.
Fold one third of the dough into the center. Take the other end and fold
that over the doubled side. You now have three layers. Roll this out again
to the same dimensions as the first time. Repeat entire process a total of
four times. The last time do not roll out but refrigerate folded.
Preheat oven to 400F. Roll refrigerated dough into large rectangle a
quarter of an inch thick. Mark and cut into 6 equal squares. Next cut each
square in half diagonally. Roll the triangle starting from base to apex and
place on a greased baking dish. Refrigerate again for twenty minutes.
Finally, bake in oven for 20-25 minutes.
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French Bread
Why bother making your own French
bread! After creating this
comp|ete|y vegan version, you'||
know why!
Sift and thoroughly combine flours with the vital wheat gluten and salt
together, in a large mixing bowl.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups whole wheat flour
2 cups unbleached white flour
2 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
2 tsps salt
1 cup soy milk - preheated to 110F
1 cup water - preheated to 110F
2 Tbsps active dry yeast
3 tsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
3 Tbsps soy margarine - melted
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Combine soy milk and water, then heat to around 110F. Next, mix in the
yeast and sugar and set aside until froth forms on the surface. When
ready, mix the melted margarine into the yeast liquid, then form a well in
the center of salted-flour mix, and pour liquid into well. Stir thoroughly,
but do not knead at this time. Cover dough with a wet towel and let rise
about one hour until in has doubled in size.
Punch down and knead dough for about one minute, then break into two
halves and form each half into a long cigar shape. Next, roll this flat into a
1/4 inch thick rectangle, then take one edge of the flattened dough and
roll this into a tight cylindrical form. Taper in the ends and make small
incisions along the top of the loaf. Set loaves aside to rise for 15-20 min-
utes.
Preheat oven to 400F. Place a pan of hot water in the oven to provide
some moisture. Put loaves on a well greased flat baking tray and bake 40
minutes. Brush tops with margarine after 35 minutes. Remove from oven
and allow to stand 10 minutes before slicing.
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French Toast
Great French toast without eggs!
You won't find This recipe |acking in
f|avor or satisfaction. ln fact, the
nutritiona| va|ue is superior to the
egg version.
Heat a skillet and add 1 tablespoon of margarine. Beat up the eggless
egg with the soy milk, then dredge the bread through the liquid. Fry on
both sides and serve with maple syrup.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp soy margarine
1 Eggless Egg
1/2 cup soy milk
2 pieces whole grain bread
(as needed) maple syrup
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German Coffee Cake
Made with German "kuchen" dough,
or sweet yeast bread. Very tasty and
great for breakfast.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4 cups unbleached white flour
2 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
1 tsp salt
1 cup water - preheated to 110F
2 Tbsps active dry yeast
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/2 cup soy margarine (at room temperature)
1 Eggless Egg
1 Tbsp lemon rind - grated
1 cup soy milk
(as needed) Morning Coffee Cake Glaze
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Thoroughly combine flour with the vital wheat gluten and salt, in a large
mixing bowl. Heat water to 110F then stir in yeast and one tablespoon of
the raw sugar. Allow this to rest for about ten minutes or until it becomes
frothy on the surface.
Cream the margarine, remaining raw sugar, eggless egg and lemon rind
together with a whisk, then mix in the soy milk and add this liquid to the
yeast water. Form a well in the flour, then thoroughly stir in the liquid
slurry into the flour, then knead lightly. Place a wet towel over the dough
and allow to rise until dough is doubled in size.
Knead dough at this time until smooth and elastic. Wrap up tightly with
plastic and refrigerate at least 2 hours before using.
Preheat oven to 375F. To create a coffee cake ring grease a ring pan and
cut the dough in half. Refrigerate one half. Take the other half and shape it
into a fat snake the size of the pans inner circumference, by hand rolling
on a lightly floured board.
Place the dough snake in the ring bold and bake at 350F for 20 minutes.
Remove from oven, dribble on the Morning Coffee Cake Glaze and
bake for another ten minutes. Remove, let stand at least five minutes
before serving.
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Hot Cross Buns
Hot Cross buns...everybody's heard
about them. Here's how to make
fine vegan buns with German Kuchen
dough.
Grease a cookie sheet or baking pan and preheat oven to 400F. Form lit-
tle balls of kuchen, or German Coffee Cake dough and place tightly
together on the baking pan. Bake for ten minutes then open oven and
make crisscross indentations on each one. Bake another ten minutes or
until buns have more than doubled in size. Remove and fill the gashes
with Morning Coffee Cake Glaze and sprinkle on the cinnamon. Great
breakfast treats.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
(as needed) German Coffee Cake dough
(as needed) Morning Coffee Cake Glaze
few pinches cinnamon
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Gar|ic Bread
5imp|e to make, using the freoch
reod recipe. Makes a great
accompaniment to lta|ian dishes.
Heat the oil in a small pan and fry the diced garlic and salt on low heat
until it garlic begins to brown, then remove from heat. Cut the loaf in
half, lengthwise and apply the oil and garlic mixture to the opened sur-
faces of the loaf with spoon or pastry brush. If desired, sprinkle a little
oregano as well.
Preheat oven 400F and bake the bread for 15 minutes, loosely covered
with foil. Remove foil and bake 5 minutes more. Serve hot.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup garlic cloves - diced
1 tsp salt
1 loaf French Bread
1/2 tsp oregano (optional)
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Home 5ty|e Quick Bread
This bread is made from a cornbread
|ike batter, fortified with who|e
grains and nutritious soy. Easy to
make in about an hour.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 & 1/2 cups whole wheat flour
1 cup unbleached white flour
1 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
1 tsp salt
2 tsps baking powder
1 12-oz package silken tofu
1 cup soy milk
1/4 cup molasses
2 tsps raw sugar
2 tsps Egg Substitute
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Sift and thoroughly combine flours with the vital wheat gluten, salt and
baking powder. Blend the tofu and soy milk with the molasses, sugar and
egg replacement substitute. Stir wet mix into dry mix and pour this into a
greased baking dish. Bake in a preheated oven at 400F for about 45
minutes. Use a toothpick to test that loaf is thoroughly baked.
Muffins The following are some recipes for dinner
muffins. The important thing to remember
when making muffins is to not beat batter too
much. This causes gluten to form, making
muffins dense and hard. Mixing must be lim-
ited to an absolute minimum.
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Basic Muffins
This recipe i||ustrates vegan muffin
making fundamenta|s. Enjoy |ight
and tasty who|e grain muffins any
time with this easy recipe.
Thoroughly combine flour with the vital wheat* gluten and salt, in a large
mixing bowl. Beat the eggless eggs with the soy milk, raw sugar and
melted margarine.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1 cup unbleached white flour
2 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsps baking powder
2 Eggless Eggs
1 cup soy milk
1/3 cup raw sugar
4 Tbsps soy margarine - melted
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Make a well inside the flour in the mixing bowl. Pour liquid ingredients
into the center of this well. Using a rubber spatula, begin folding the flour
into the well while spinning the bowl with the other hand. Do this gently
and quickly.
Grease a muffin pan and have oven preheated to 400F. Use a table
spoon to drop balls of dough into the muffin forms. Leave a few forms
empty and fill these with water to create moisture in the oven while cook-
ing. Bake muffins for 20 to 25 minutes. Once removed, allow muffins to
stand for a minute or two before removing from forms. This will insure
that they pop out cleanly and easily.
*Note: Although over-development of gluten in muffin dough is detri-
mental to muffin making, the addition of a small amount of vital wheat
gluten does produce a better textured muffin.
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Corn Muffins
Another variation on Basic Muffins,
this recipe produces a de|icious corn
muffin.
Mix the cornmeal with the flour, salt and baking powder. Beat the eggless
eggs with the soy milk, sugar, molasses and margarine.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups yellow corn meal
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsps baking powder
2 Eggless Eggs
1 cup soy milk
3 Tbsps raw sugar
3 Tbsps molasses
3 Tbsps soy margarine - melted
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Make a well inside the flour in the mixing bowl. Pour liquid ingredients
into the center of this well. Using a rubber spatula, begin folding the flour
into the well while spinning the bowl with the other hand. Do this gently
and quickly.
Grease a muffin pan and have oven preheated to 400F. Use a table
spoon to drop balls of dough into the muffin forms. Leave a few forms
empty and fill these with water to create moisture in the oven while cook-
ing. Bake muffins for 20 to 25 minutes. Once removed, allow muffins to
stand for a minute or two before removing from forms. This will insure
that they pop out cleanly and easily.
Morning Coffee Cake
Here's a hea|thy, gui|t-free coffee
cake, that's comp|ete|y vegan.
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Sift flours together with the vital wheat gluten, salt and baking powder,
then cut margarine into this flour mix. In a separate bowl, beat sugar,
sour cream and vanilla together with the soy milk, then thoroughly com-
bine this mixture with the prepared flour mix, to form batter.
Preheat oven to 350F and grease a ring mold. Pour in batter. Bake for
25 to 30 minutes. Dribble warm Morning Coffee Cake Glaze over cake
top 5 minutes before cake is done.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
2 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsps baking powder
2/3 cup soy margarine
3/4 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup Sour Cream
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 cup soy milk
(as needed) Morning Coffee Cake Glaze
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Morning Coffee Cake G|aze
Use this sweet white g|aze on
Moro|og Co[[ee Cokes, Hot Cross
oos or Cinnamon Ro||s.
Combine all ingredients into a sauce pan and slowly bring to a boil while
stirring. Pour over Morning Coffee Cake or pastry while hot.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup soy margarine
1/4 cup soy milk
1/4 cup maple syrup
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/4 cup walnuts - broken
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Pizza Dough
Perfect pizza dough is easier to make
than you might have guessed. This
recipe can be used for making pizza,
strombo|i, ca|zone and more.
Sift and thoroughly combine flours with the vital wheat gluten and salt,
into a large mixing bowl, then set aside. Stir the yeast into the hot water
with the xylitol (or raw sugar) and set aside. When surface of yeast water
becomes frothy, mix in the oil. Next stir this into the dry ingredients until
you have a soggy dough. Set this aside, covered, until dough has risen
and doubled in size. Punch this down and knead one minute. Add a little
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/2 cups whole wheat flour
1 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
3 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
3 tsps salt
2 Tbsps active dry yeast
3 cups water - preheated to 110F
1 tsp xylitol (or raw sugar)
1/3 cup soy oil
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flour if needed, to firm up dough. Cover well and refrigerate at least one
hour before using.
Lefsa
A f|atbread of eastern European
descent. Made with a dough of
mashed potatoes, sour cream and
f|our. Can be stuffed with a various
fi||ings, then baked with sauces to
create unique mea|s.
Mix all ingredients into a dough ball and refrigerate overnight. Roll out
thin on a floured board. Have a griddle, large skillet or grill surface hot
and place one side of the lefsa down. Turn once after surface begins to
bubble. Remove from heat source and lefsa is ready to stuff.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup Mashed Potatoes
1/2 cup Sour Cream
1 tsp raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
1 tsp salt
1 cup unbleached white flour
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Nordic Rye Bread
There's Norwegian rye, 5wedish rye
and jewish rye bread, so we'|| ca|| this
one Nordic rye. Easy to make and
nutritious, too.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/2 cups rye flour
1 cup unbleached white flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
2 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
2 Tbsps salt
1/4 cup raw sugar
1 Tbsp fennel seeds
2 tsps caraway seeds
3 Tbsps active dry yeast
1 & 1/2 cups water - preheated to 110F
1/4 cup molasses
1/4 cup soy oil
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Sift and thoroughly combine flours with the vital wheat gluten, salt, raw
sugar, caraway and fennel seeds into a large mixing bowl, then set aside.
Mix yeast into the hot water with the molasses and set aside for at least
ten minutes or until surface becomes frothy. When the yeast water is
frothy, add the oil and soy milk. Pour this into the center of the mixing
bowl with the flours and mix well into a moist dough. Cover and allow to
rise about 1 hour.
When ready, punch dough down and knead well until it is smooth and
elastic. Cover again and let rise another 20-30 minutes.
Flour a board and punch down dough. Knead lightly and then cut dough
in half. Take each piece and form a loaf by lightly rolling in the dough
and then, while holding in both hands, pull dough underneath with your
fingers while stretching the top until a nice loaf shape is achieved.
Grease a baking sheet. Place each loaf on the sheet. Bake 45 minutes in
a 375F oven. Remove from pans and let rest several minutes before slic-
ing.
1 cup soy milk
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Pita Bread
This great Midd|e Eastern |eavened
f|atbread has a mu|titude of uses.
Fa|afe| or sa|ad stuffers are a
common usage. You can be as
creative as you want to be with pitas.
Sift and thoroughly combine flour with the vital wheat gluten, salt and
baking soda. Mix the oil with the water and vinegar and add this to the
prepared flour mixture. Combine well and let rest for 20 minutes.
Knead dough one minute then break off balls of dough 3 inches in diam-
eter. Roll these flat on a floured board. Preheat oven to 450F with a flat
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 Tbsp soy oil
1/2 tsp apple cider vinegar
3/4 cup water
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baking stone on the oven rack. Make sure flat breads are well floured,
then place them on the stone. Bake 10 minutes on one side, five minutes
on the other. Remove and cool down 10 minutes.
Pierogies
Pierogies are wonderfu| stuffed
dump|ings with strong e|astic
casings. They ho|d fi||ings we|| and
yet, are sti|| de|icate. They can be
stuffed with a variety of fi||ings and
are used in a variety of dishes.
Sift and thoroughly combine flour with the vital wheat gluten and salt,
then add the water. Knead lightly and let rest 20 minutes. Knead dough
about 1 minute and roll out dough to an eighth inch thickness.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup unbleached white flour
1 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
1 tsp salt
3/4 cup water
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Use a round cookie cutter or jar lid about 3 inches in diameter and cut out
discs of dough. Apply desired filling (such as Mashed Potatoes) in the
middle and slightly off center of the dough. Use a small paint brush and
brush a little cold water around the rim. Fold long side over filling and
crimp down edges with a fork. Boil or fry before using.
Pot Pie Dough
Great for who|e grain pot pie she||s,
vegetab|e turnovers or other dinner
pastry ideas, this recipe is re|iab|e
with great f|avor.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup soy margarine
5 Tbsps water
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Take one quarter cup of the white flour and set aside. Sift the remaining
flours, salt and baking powder in a mixing bowl. Have the margarine
about 70F and cut this into the flour mix until well granulated.
Mix the five tablespoons of water with the quarter cup of flour and make a
slurry. Mix this slurry into the flour mix and knead dough into a ball. Cut
into four equal pieces and refrigerate at least 30 minutes before using.
Makes 2 pie crusts with tops.
Pancakes Here are some easy basic pancakes recipe
that are entirely vegan. Nothing makes
breakfast so special like flapjacks. Use these
recipes and feel free to experiment once
youve learned the fundamentals.
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Basic Wheat Pancakes
How about adding the goodness of
who|e wheat to your pancakes
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/4 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1/2 tsp salt
4-5 tsps raw sugar
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp Egg Substitute
3 Tbsps soy margarine - melted
1 cup soy milk
2 Tbsps soy oil
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Sift the dry ingredients into a mixing bowl. Mix the melted margarine into
the soy milk and stir this into the flour mix making a loose batter.
Heat up a skillet and add 2 tablespoons of oil. Use a ladle to drop batter
into hot pan. Turn heat to medium and lightly brown both sides. Serve
with maple syrup.
Potato Pancakes
A vegan version of an o|d wor|d
c|assic.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups raw potatoes - grated
2 Tbsps unbleached white flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
2 tsps salt
2 Tbsps soy oil
1 Tbsp Egg Substitute
2 Tbsps onion - minced (optional)
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Soak the grated potatoes in cold water for at least an hour. When ready,
thoroughly mix the soaked potatoes with the other ingredients. Spoon
into a hot skillet with the soy oil and fry until browned on both sides. Serve
with Sour Cream or apple sauce.
Matzoh Cracker Pancakes
This de|icious pancake is a great way
to use matzoh crackers.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4 whole wheat matzoh meal crackers -
hand crumbled
2 Tbsps soy oil
2 Eggless Eggs
3 Tbsps unbleached white flour
1/2 cup soy milk
1-2 tsps salt
2 tsps soy margarine - melted
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Crumble matzohs with your hand, into a small bowl, then pour just
enough boiling water over them to cover. Let stand 15 minutes.
Heat a skillet and add the soy oil. Mix the soaked matzohs with the egg-
less eggs, flour, soy milk, salt and melted margarine. Drop batter into skil-
let with a spoon and brown on both sides. Serve with maple syrup or fruit
preserves.
Waff|es
You need a waff|e iron for this
one...but its worth it.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Eggless Eggs
1 & 1/2 cups soy milk
1/4 cup soy margarine - melted
4 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/2 cup Sour Cream
1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1 cup unbleached white flour
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Preheat waffle iron until it is hot and ready. Beat eggless eggs with the soy
milk, melted margarine, sugar and sour cream.
Sift the flours with the salt, baking powder and baking soda. Mix the liq-
uid ingredients with the dry ingredients forming a batter. Pour this batter
in the center of each waffle section.
Close lid and cook until waffle iron stops steaming or, if automatic, a light,
bell or whistle will warn you that it is done. If iron doesnt open readily,
cook one more minute. Iron should open and waffle eject easily. Serve
with melted margarine and maple syrup.
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsps baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Corn Mea| Pancakes
This |ight f|apjack is a rea| favorite
fami|y c|assic.
Mix the raw sugar with the corn meal and then pour the boiling water in
and stir well. Cover and set aside five minutes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
1 cup yellow corn meal
1 cup boiling water
1/2 cup unbleached white flour
1 tsp salt
2 tsps Egg Substitute
2 tsps baking powder
3/4 cup soy milk
2 Tbsps soy margarine - melted
2 Tbsps soy oil
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Sift the white flour with the salt, egg substitute and baking powder into a
mixing bowl.
Mix the soy milk, melted margarine with prepared corn meal mash. Pour
this thinned slurry into the bowl with the prepared flour mix. Stir this into a
batter.
Heat a skillet and add the 2 tablespoons soy oil. Pour the batter in with a
ladle allowing to flow in the desired sized pancake. Cook an medium,
lightly browning both sides.
Oatmea| Pancakes
Mix the best of both breakfast
wor|ds -- oatmea| and pancakes -- in
one de|icious f|apjack.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup boiling water
1/2 cup rolled oats
1/2 cup unbleached white flour
1 tsp salt
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Bring the cup of water to a boil in a small sauce pan. Add the oatmeal,
reduce heat to low. Cook, covered for 3-5 minutes.
Mix the white flour with the salt and baking powder. Add the soy milk,
sugar, and melted margarine, to the hot oatmeal. Next, pour this concoc-
tion into the flour mix and beat into a batter.
Heat a skillet and add the soy oil. Use a ladle to pour batter into pan.
Brown both sides on medium heat. Serve with maple syrup.
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup soy milk
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
2 Tbsps soy margarine - melted
2 Tbsps soy oil
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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B|ueberry Pancakes
Nothing quite compares to good,
o|d fashioned b|ueberry pancakes.
Mix the fresh, washed berries with the pancake batter. Heat a skillet and
add a little oil. Fry pancakes on medium, browning both sides. Cover pan
during the first half of the cooking process for a better cooked berry.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup fresh blueberries
1 cup Basic Wheat Pancakes batter
2 Tbsps soy oil
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Puff Pastry
This prepared dough is a very
versati|e substance for creating
de|icious and interesting baked
goods, ranging from croissants to
stuffed pastry pies.
Stir the flour and salt. and set aside.
Heat the soy milk to about 110F and mix in the yeast and raw sugar.
When the yeast has risen and the liquid has a foam on top, add the oil to
the liquid. Now mix the liquid and salted flour mix together, knead and
set aside, covered for about 45 minutes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1 tsp salt
1 cup soy milk - preheated to 110F
1 Tbsp active dry yeast
1 Tbsp raw sugar (or xylitol)
1 Tbsp soy oil
1 cup soy margarine - melted
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Punch down the expanded dough and knead until it becomes smooth and
elastic. Cover the dough and refrigerate for half an hour. Remove dough
and turn onto a floured board. Roll dough out into an oblong form, a 1/4
inch thick. Using a pastry brush, paint melted (not warmer than 70F)
margarine.
Fold one third of the dough into the center. Take the other end and fold
that over the doubled side. You now have three layers. Roll this out again
to the same dimensions as the first time. Repeat entire process a total of
four times. The last time do not roll out but refrigerate folded. This refrig-
erated dough can be saved for future applications.
Who|e Wheat Bread
Perfect bread is not difficu|t to make
with this recipe. Adding vita| wheat
g|uten is the key to successfu| who|e
wheat bread making.
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Sift and thoroughly combine flour with the vital wheat gluten and salt, into
a large mixing bowl.
Mix the hot water with the yeast and raw sugar (or xylitol). Allow several
minutes for the yeast water to become frothy, then add the oil. Pour this
liquid into the center of the mixing bowl containing the flour mix. Stir well
with a large rubber spatula, then finish and shape into a ball with your
hands. Cover with a moist towel or inverted mixing bowl and let set in a
warm room.
In about one hour the dough should have doubled in size. Punch this
down and knead the dough for about two minutes. Cover dough and
allow to rise again, about 30 minutes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4 cups whole wheat flour
6 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
1 Tbsp salt
2 & 3/4 cups water - preheated to 110F
2 Tbsps active dry yeast
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/3 cup soy oil
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Punch down dough and knead about 30 seconds. Sprinkle a little flour on
a board and cut dough in half. Roll each dough ball on the flour. Next,
pick it up and hold the dough ball in you hands and begin to knead by
drawing the dough underneath you fingers. This stretches the top while
shaping into a loaf.
Grease to loaf pans and preheat oven to 400F. Make loaves as described
above and place in pans. Bake one hour or until loaf tops are firm.
Remove from pans and let rest on their sides for ten minutes before slic-
ing.
Who|e Wheat Ro||s
De|icious who|esome ro||s for
sandwiches or as dinner ro||s, hot out
of the oven.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
(as needed) Whole Wheat Bread dough
1/4 cup soy margarine - melted
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Follow the directions for making whole wheat bread in this chapter.
Instead of making bread loaves, however, form small balls about three
inches in diameter for sandwich rolls, or two inches in diameter for dinner
rolls.
Grease a cookie sheet and preheat oven to 375F. Place balls on sheet
with about one inch space around each ball. Bake about 25 minutes.
Dough balls will expand and connect forming rolls. Brush tops with
melted margarine after twenty minutes for a smooth, glazed finish.
White Bread
The use of organica||y grown and
responsib|y processed white f|our
makes this bread a nutritiona||y
stab|e treat.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4 cups unbleached white flour
2 Tbsps vital wheat gluten
3 tsps salt
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Sift and thoroughly combine flour with the vital wheat gluten, salt and soy
flour (optional), then set aside.
Mix hot water with the yeast and raw sugar. When yeasted water froths
up, pour the oil into the water. Mix this liquid thoroughly with the flour,
forming a wet dough. Cover and set in a warm place to rise for one hour.
When dough has risen to twice its original size, punch it down and knead
for two minutes. Cover and allow to rise again for 30 minutes.
Sprinkle a little flour on a board and cut dough in half. Roll each dough
ball on the flour. Next, pick it up and hold the dough ball in you hands
and begin to knead by drawing the dough underneath you fingers. This
stretches the top while shaping into a loaf.
Grease two loaf pans and preheat oven to 400F. Place loaves in pans
and bake one hour or until top crust is firm. Remove from pans and let
rest on their sides for ten minutes before slicing.
2 Tbsps soy flour (optional)
2 & 1/2 cups water - preheated to 110F
2 Tbsps active dry yeast
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or fructose, or xylitol, or sucanat)
1/3 cup soy oil
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Vegan Meats
Introduction In this chapter you will learn to perform a
variety of techniques for transforming raw
materials into high protein substances.
Using only vegetable-sourced ingredients
you will discover how to create working
meats, suitable for sauts, casseroles,
grilling and other applications.
The foods described in this chapter are the
cornerstone of vegan home style cooking.
Once you learn how to prepare and use
these substances you will feel like the mas-
ter of self sufficiency. No longer will you
feel a slave to the American meat market.
Your ability to become a vegetarian and to
remain a vegetarian for the rest of your life
may be based, to a good extant, on your
interest in this chapter.
You will explore the wonderful power of soy
and how to work with soy products. Dis-
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cover how to prepare tofu or tempeh in inter-
esting ways. An extensive section covering
general usage of soy products is also
included. Learn how to use TVP [Textured
Vegetable Protein], in a variety of ways.
Everything youll need to know about creating
wheat meats is covered here. This chapter
unveils the real power of wheat, the Staff of
Life. Try the recipes for creating different ver-
sions of seitan, the ancient wheat meat of the
Orient. Also included are some of the worlds
most original recipes for gluten steak and
gluten products.
As you learn to produce these meats in your
home, a broader understanding of the
human condition will begin to grow inside of
you. As you help to relieve the burden that
farm animals have to bear as food commodi-
ties in our world, positive universal forces will
come to your aid. The ripple effect of your
evolved understanding and implementation
of the recipes and principals in this book, will
help to heal our world.
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Soy Based Meats
Tofu ...the other white meat. Made by curdling
soy milk and then packing the curds like
cheese, tofu is an ancient substance. First
developed by the Chinese thousands of years
ago, it has been a staple food in the Orient
ever since. Introduced to the West by Chinese
immigrants in the latter half of the nineteenth
century, it took 100 years for the public to
catch on. Today, however, many forms of tofu
and tofu products flood American and Euro-
pean markets. With its health benefits and
numerous applications, tofu has become an
all world food.
Tofu is usually purchased at a local grocery or
health food store. The two most common
forms are basic tofu: available in soft,
medium, firm or extra firm varieties; or silken
tofu: also available in these grades. Silken
Tofu is smooth with a very fine grain that
lends itself well to preparations such as pies,
cakes, sauces, condiments and thickeners.
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Silken Tofu is featured in a variety of recipes
found in nearly every chapter in this book.
In this chapter, however, it is basic tofu and its
application as a working meat for sauts,
soups, casseroles, grilled and broiled dishes
that well be exploring. The grade of tofu rec-
ommended for this purpose is extra firm.
Softer varieties of tofu dont hold up as well
and can produce disappointing results.
Because tofu is bland in taste and weak of
fiber, many unenlightened novices may think
of tofu as inferior in nature. For the true mas-
ter, however, it is these very qualities that pro-
vide a perfect medium for his or her art of
transformation
Tofu Cooking Tips 1. The cut of tofu is of primary interest as this
will define its role in the particular dish it is to
be used in. Cubing tofu for sauts and casse-
roles, etc... is the most familiar form. Extra
firm tofu is great for more interesting cuts
such as fillets, steaks, triangles, cutlets and
even special shapes made with cookie cut-
ters. Thin, pan seared wafers are another
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possibility. Learn to use the tip of your knife
for more control in cutting out odd sauts
meat pieces that resemble chicken breast or
other cuts of meat.
2. Tofu can be marinated before using. Its
spongy texture absorbs flavor well. Squeeze
original water out of tofu block before
immersing, completely in marinade.
3. Parboiling the tofu cutlets in water or stock
will transform the texture from a crumbly con-
sistency to a smoother, more flexible form.
This rendering makes the tofu hold its form
better. Steaming or simmering in a stew or
saut will achieve similar results.
4. As in other cooking applications, searing
will help tofu surfaces to maintain their form.
This quick frying in hot oil creates a micro-
scopically thin skin that maintains the shape
intended and seals in flavor. If sauting with
a small amount of oil, simply add the cuts to
the saut at an early stage and maintain
medium heat. Flip pan or turn to sear all
sides.
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If you are preparing a larger meal or want to
store these meats prepared for future use,
skillet frying with non-stick cookware works
well. Again, get pan hot first then reduce to
medium heat. Sear all sides. If deep frying,
fry 30 to 45 seconds, drain well.
5. Reverse marinating: sear tofu cuts as men-
tioned in rule 4, then boil in flavored stock
for ten minutes.
6. When grilling tofu, preheat the tofu by
heating in a pan with a little water, stock or
marinade. This will help to prevent tofu from
sticking on a hot grill. Brush the tofu with the
desired grill glaze or with a little oil before
placing tofu on the hot grill. Have grill surface
temperature at medium hot and grill tofu
long enough to create well defined grill lines.
7. When broiling tofu, have broiler set at
400F. Grease a baking pan and place tofu
and any vegetables desired together with the
chosen sauce on the pan or tray. Baste well
and broil for about 5 minutes, turn and baste
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a little more and broil another 5 minutes.
Repeat this process until tofu and veggies are
browned.
8. To saut a scrambled mix of tofu and diced
veggies, start the vegetables first with a little
oil in a hot pan. Reduce heat to medium.
After 5 minutes add the crumbled tofu and
seasoning, cover and braise this for five min-
utes. Remove cover and stir mixture, then
resume cooking another five minutes. Next,
add liquid such as vegetable stock or citrus.
Cover pan again and steam this all down
until liquid is reduced. This finished product
is usually a stuffing, patty, scrambled mock
egg or as a layer in casseroles.
9. To bread tofu for sauts, dredge the cuts,
or slices, in flour and fry on both sides. One
can substitute soy flour or a mixture of corn
meal and cornstarch for wheat flour if
desired.
10. To bread tofu for chicken fried applica-
tions, simply dredge piece in flour then soy
milk then bread crumbs. Alternative method:
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soy flour or rice flour, rice milk, corn meal.
The above rules apply to all preparations of
tofu as a meat substitute. To create cutlets or
saut meats and store for future use, simply
use rules 2 and 3 or alternatively rules 4 and
5.
Tempeh Tempeh is a soy bean food product produced
by packing cooked, mashed beans and then
fermenting for a given time period. Tempeh
can be found fermented with other whole
grains or vegetable bits for increased nutri-
tional value and different flavors.
Creating tempeh at home is not recom-
mended, it is readily available at local gro-
cery or health food stores. Enjoying tempeh
may be an acquired experience for many of
us as it is has a peculiar nutty flavor. A good
chef can learn to work with it, maximizing on
its potential as a high protein natural food-
stuff.
Like tofu, seitan or gluten, tempeh works well
as saut meat, in stews, casseroles or grilled.
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These are a few rules for cooking tempeh that
should be observed
Tempeh Cooking
Tips
1. Although possible, it is not recommended
to marinate tempeh, if it is not very firm,
before cooking. Tempeh may become mushy
and fall apart. Reverse marinate -- sear first
then soak.
2. Sear tempeh cuts. Pan fry on high heat
briefly in a small amount of oil, browning all
sides. Or, deep fry 45 seconds at 350F.
Drain well and use or refrigerate.
3. Keep tempeh refrigerated until using.
Tempeh is firm and easy to work with cold. If
tempeh is too warm it will become soft and
fall apart easily.
4. To get the best flavor from tempeh, use
thin slices, well seared in cooking applica-
tions. Tempeh absorbs flavor and keeps it
shape if seared.
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TVP Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP) is a high
protein food by-product manufactured from
soy beans. Wheat and corn can also be used
to produce TVP foods, though the term is usu-
ally applied to isolated soy protein products.
Soy bean TVP is produced in large quantities
and converted to a multitude of end use food
products.
What well be exploring is TVP end products
such as poultry or beef style chunks, TVP
burger blend and soy meal or flour. These
products are excellent raw materials for the
vegan chef. One must, however, learn how
to use them and this information is not
readily available. In this section well look at
different types of textured soy products and
apply some basic rules for using effectively.
Textured soy protein is manufactured by utiliz-
ing the cracked, flaked and heated bean in
the oil extraction process. The resultant meal
is then emulsified and heat fused. The prod-
uct is a fibrous substance that is higher in
protein than beef, without fat or starch. The
marketed products are usually infused with
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concentrated vegetable flavorings and conve-
nient shapes for cooking applications.
Textured soy is also used as an ingredient
together with wheat gluten, isolated soy pro-
tein, vegetable flavorings, herbs and spices to
create the veggie cold cuts. These convenient,
healthy and karma free foods are continually
growing in variety and popularity. They can
be found in most food markets.
Simplified, isolated soy protein is dehydrated,
freeze dried tofu flakes ground into powder.
Like tofu it is edible raw and can be found as
a main ingredient in body building protein
drinks. It is also sold in capsule form as a
health supplement. Other uses include silken
tofu and as a binder in prepared foods.
Convenient dehydrated mixtures of these
vegetable proteins are a boon for the creative
vegan chef. With a variety of flavored protein
mixes for specialized purposes, quick meals
can be easily assembled.
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In this section our main emphasis will be on
the TVP burger blend. What a good vegan
chef can do with raw soy burger that has sim-
ilar properties as beef, is mind-boggling.
Well examine a few recipes here, exemplify-
ing the versatility of this substance.
Hopefully this chapter will shed some light on
what these foods are and how to use them
effectively. There is nothing to be afraid of.
These are good, healthy protein substances
that will add variety and enjoyment to your
life. These products are fast becoming main-
stream in our culture and will be a large part
of the worlds food supply in the near future.
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TVP Chunks
These dehydrated soy meat chunks
have been f|avored with
concentrated vegetab|e-sourced
f|avorings to resemb|e the taste of
beef or chicken.
To re-hydrate and use in sauts, salads, soups or casseroles, boil TVP
chunks 3 minutes in stock or water. Cover pot and let stand about 15 min-
utes. Drain off any excess liquid and meats are ready to use in soups,
stews, casseroles or sauts. TVP will be moist and flavorful.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups TVP burger style (or TVP poultry style)
[Textured Vegetable Protein]
4 cups Vegetable Stock (or water)
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Vegan Meat|oaf
The fo||owing recipe for vegan
meat|oaf is has simi|ar characteristics
to that of ground beef.
Mix the burger blend with the cold water, then refrigerate for at least 30
minutes, or more.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 lbs TVP burger blend
3 & 1/2 cups ice cold water
1/4 cup tomato paste
1 tsp black pepper
1 Tbsp thyme leaf
1 medium onion - diced
1 tsp salt
1 cup bread crumbs
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After sufficient set time, add all ingredients together and mix with your
clean hands, by smooshing TVP through your fingers. It is the best way to
thoroughly mix it, as the working material is extremely stiff.
Preheat oven to 400F. Grease a bread loaf pan and push the mixture into
the pan. Use wet hands to smooth the top over, then bake loaf in the
oven for 55 minutes.
Allow to cool completely before using. Loaf should be cooled to 40F
before using. If you attempt to serve immediately from the oven, loaf will
crumble badly.
To prepare loaf for serving, slice off desired number of pieces about a half
inch thick from cold loaf. Heat up a skillet and add a small amount of oil.
Brown each piece well on both sides. Serve with vegan gravy or other
sauce or use cold in sandwiches with ketchup.
NOTE: A dinner made with slices of this loaf, mashed potatoes and vegan
gravy is the single most popular item sold at Veggie Works. It is no won-
der, as this vegan version beats out any meatloaf made with animal flesh,
hands down. This loaf has tamed a great many carnivores since it was
introduced in 1994, and if you learn to make correctly, you will convert
many more.
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Breakfast '5ausage'
Great |itt|e mock sausage patties
with |ots of protein. Exce||ent
accompaniment to Mock Scromb|ed
ggs and pancakes or muffins.
Mix all the dry ingredients, then set aside. Mix oil and water, then com-
bine with dry ingredients and chill for 30 minutes. Wet hands and form 3-
4 patties. Griddle fry, covered on medium heat.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup TVP burger blend
2 Tbsps unbleached white flour (organic)
1 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsps fennel seeds - crushed
1 pinch each: cumin, thyme, coriander, savory,
bay leaves - powdered
1 Tbsp soy oil
2 cups water
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lta|ian 5ausage
With a|| the f|avor, appearance and
texture of the traditiona| pork and
beef version.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3 Tbsps fennel seeds - crushed
2 lbs TVP burger blend - prepared
1 tsp allspice
1 tsp salt
1 tsp black pepper
3 Tbsps soy oil
2 Tbsps onion powder
1 Tbsp garlic powder
1 cup vital wheat gluten
1/4 cup olive oil
1 cup Vegetable Stock
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Heat up a skillet (or saute pan), then dry roast fennel seeds until lightly
browned.
Place the prepared burger mix in a large bowl and combine the roasted
fennel seed, allspice, salt, pepper, soy oil, onion and garlic powders. Mix
ingredients well.
Remove a small handful of the sausage mixture and form this into a one
inch diameter by 4-5 inches long cylinder (using wet hands). Pour a small
amount of the vital wheat gluten into a tray and proceed to roll the sau-
sage in this flour. When sausage is coated, wet your hands again and
gently hydrate the vital wheat gluten coating on the sausage. Repeat this
procedure several times until a skin develops. Use the same method to
convert the rest of the TVP mixture into sausages.
When sausages are skinned, heat up a large skillet and add enough
olive oil to cover bottom of pan. Pan fry sausages in the olive oil, turning
to brown all sides. Remove sausages when well browned.
Next, pour off oil from skillet and add one-half cup of the vegetable stock.
Place half the sausages in the pan, bring to a boil and then simmer until
liquid is absorbed. Repeat this procedure with the rest of the sausages.
Sausages can now be refrigerated for use in sautees, etc. Recipe makes
15-20 small sausages.
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Taco-5ty|e Ground Beef
This method of preparing ground soy
burger can be a|tered with spices to
create authentic tasting ethnic
mea|s.
Mix the burger blend with the cold water, then refrigerate for at least 30
minutes, or more. Fry onions, garlic and spices in oil, on medium heat,
for 5 minutes. Crumble in wet TVP, add salt and oregano, cover pan and
cook 3 minutes. Uncover, chop-up burger, mix into saute and brown 10
minutes. Makes about 3 pounds of seasoned taco style beef.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
16 ozs TVP burger blend
3 & l/2 cups cold water
1 cup onions - diced
2 Tbsps garlic clove - crushed
1/4 cup soy oil
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
2 tsps oregano
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Vegan Meatballs Our Veggie Works brand of TVP burger blend,
makes the best meatballs. It has been said
that our meatballs are better than traditional
meatballs made with animal flesh. Here are
two recipes for meatballs, both delicious.
lta|ian Meatba||s
With a|| the f|avor, texture and
protein of traditiona| lta|ian
meatba||s, this vegan version has no
cho|estero| and no saturated fat.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
16 ozs TVP burger blend
3 & 3/4 cups cold water
1 small onion - diced
3 Tbsps garlic clove - crushed
1/4 cup parsley - chopped
2 Tbsps oregano
1-2 tsps salt
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Mix the burger blend with the cold water, then refrigerate for at least 30
minutes, or more. After set time, toss all ingredients into the prepared
burger mix and smoosh together with clean hands. Squeeze and push
hands into mix letting it squeeze through your fingers. You can add a little
cold water if it seems to dry.
Once mixed, use wet hands to form small round balls. Heat skillet and
add oil (about 1/4 cup). Fry balls, turning to brown all sides. Remove to
cook further in Marinara Sauce sauce.
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 cup bread crumbs
(as needed) soy oil (for frying)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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5wedish Meatba||s
A 5candinavian favorite, during the
ho|iday seasons.
Mix the burger blend with the cold water, then refrigerate for at least 30
minutes, or more. Mix in other ingredients well, as described in above
recipe for Italian Meatballs.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
16 ozs TVP burger blend
3 & 3/4 cups cold water
1 small onion - diced
1-2 tsps salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 scant tsp nutmeg
1 cup bread crumbs
1/4 cup parsley - minced
1 qt Swedish Meatball Gravy
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Fry balls the same as above meatball recipe. Finish meatballs by simmer-
ing in prepared gravy.
Egg|ess Egg
Use in baking and to faci|itate the
rendering of recipes that usua||y
inc|ude eggs, to hea|thy vegan
recipes.
Note: The ratio is 1:1, or, 1 EGG = 1 EGGLESS EGG
Note: Do not attempt to use as breakfast eggs, i.e. scrambled. This is a
baking agent only.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
6-oz (1/2 package) silken-firm tofu
2 tsps Egg Substitute
1 tsp powdered lecithin
3 Tbsps water
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Blend ingredients with a blender or food processor and refrigerate for
future use.
Egg 5ubstitute
This powdered mixture of binding
and |eavening agents serves as a
hea|thy rep|acement for eggs.
Note: This recipe produces the equivalent of one baking egg.
Thoroughly combine all dry ingredients together, then mix into the water.
Use as a substitute for one egg in baking recipes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Tbsp cornstarch
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1 tsp xanthum gum
3 Tbsps water
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Mock 5cramb|ed Eggs
This recipe works we|| as a
scramb|ed egg substitute. This
recipe makes two average sized
portions.
Hand crumble the tofu into a mixing bowl. Mix in flavoring agents: onion
powder, garlic powder, salt, pepper, and nutritional yeast. Heat up a skillet
and add the oil or margarine. Reduce heat to medium. Have the tofu
mixture close to room temperature and add it to the hot oil.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 block tofu - hand crumbled
1 Tbsp onion powder
1/2 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 pinch black pepper
1 Tbsp nutritional yeast
2 Tbsps soy oil (or soy margarine)
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
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Use a wooden spatula or similar device to stir the tofu, lightly browning it.
Next add the vegetable stock, cover and reduce liquid until tofu scrambled
eggs are moist, with no additional liquid. Scrambled tofu eggs are now
ready to serve.
Tofu Crabcakes
This exce||ent cake can be baked
with a number of unique sauces to
create different mock crab cake
recipes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3 Tbsps soy oil
1/2 onion - minced
4 celery stalks - minced
1 cup colored bell peppers - minced
2 lb packages firm tofu - crumbled
1 Tbsp Old Bay Seasoning
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Heat a large skillet or pot and add the oil. Mince the onion, celery, bell
peppers, then begin frying on medium heat. After frying for about 5 min-
utes, crumble the tofu into the pan and stir into sauting vegetables. Add
the Old Bay Seasoning, garlic powder, thyme, salt, black pepper, orange
juice and squeezed juice from halved lemon, to the cooking mixture. Stir
this around and simmer on low for about three minutes, covered. Next
add the vegetable stock and simmer, covered, for another 5 minutes. This
will reduce liquid and change the texture of the tofu.
Remove tofu mixture from heat and set aside to cool. When sufficiently
cooled down, add the bread crumbs and half the flour. Mix together well
and form cakes with your hands. You will need to keep wetting hands to
prevent crab cake mixture from sticking to them.
1 Tbsp garlic powder
1 tsp powdered thyme
1 Tbsp salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/3 cup orange juice
1/2 lemon - juiced
1/2 cup Vegetable Stock
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/2 cup bread crumbs
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Dredge crab cakes in the rest of the flour and fry on each side in a skillet
with hot oil. Use medium heat and cover pan to cook evenly. Bake, cov-
ered with Marinara Sauce and smothered in soy cheese or serve with
rice and steamed asparagus, topped with Seafood Sauce.
Baked Tofu Turkey
Recreate the f|avor of turkey, by
marinating a b|ock of tofu, then
baking it. A great centerpiece to a
|arge mea|.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 lb package extra-firm tofu
2 Tbsps soy oil
3 cups Vegetable Stock (for marinade)
1/2 cup orange juice ( )
2 Tbsps nutritional yeast ( )
1/2 tsp powdered thyme ( )
1/2 tsp powdered sage ( )
1 Tbsp soy sauce ( )
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With the exception of the tofu and soy oil, mix all other ingredients
together, to create marinade. Use a small, deep plastic container or stain-
less steel bowl to place the tofu and pour in the marinade mixture. Make
sure that the tofu is completely immersed. Cover container if necessary.
Allow tofu to marinate several hours...or overnight.
Preheat an oven to 350F. Place the marinated tofu into a baking pan or
dish that is small, square and deep. Mix the soy oil into the marinade,
then pour enough marinade into the baking pan to cover the tofu halfway.
Cover the pan with aluminum foil and bake the tofu for 30 minutes.
Remove the pan from the oven and uncover it. Flip the tofu over and add
more marinade to cover half the tofu. Bake another 10 minutes covered,
then uncover and roast tofu for 20 more minutes, basting occasionally
with remaining marinade. By this time liquid should have significantly
reduced. Remove tofu and let rest several minutes before slicing.
1 tsp sea salt ( )
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Tempeh Bacon 5trips
Use this c|ever recipe to create
bacon-|ike f|avor in thin strips of pan
fried tempeh. An exce||ent side dish
for breakfast, or ocoo Lettoce &
Tomoto Soodw|ch!
Prepare the flavoring by simmering the vegetable stock with the bacon
bits, black pepper and liquid smoke, for five minutes on low heat. Strain
off and set aside liquid.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
2 Tbsps vegan-style bacon bits
1-2 pinches black pepper
few drops Liquid Smoke
1/4 cup soy oil (for frying)
1 block tempeh
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Heat up a skillet and add the oil. Cut the tempeh into thin, long strips and
begin frying, on medium heat. Brown both sides of the tempeh then pour
in the strained stock. Reduce heat and simmer until liquid is absorbed.
Move pieces around in the dry pan a few moments to firm up strips, then
serve hot.
Wheat Based Meats
Seitan Proteins contain amino acids and these sub-
stances are the building blocks of life. 22 of
these amino acids make up a complete pro-
tein, yet only 8 amino acids are considered
essential amino acids. If a protein rich food
has significant amounts of these 8 essential
amino acids, the other 14 acids can be syn-
thesized by the human body.
Most grain or legume-sourced protein lack a
perfectly balanced ratio of these eight
amino acids. Animal flesh is rich in essential
aminos and this is the basis for belief that
animal protein is superior to vegetable pro-
tein.
The truth is that, through a balanced vegetar-
ian diet, all the essential amino acids can
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easily be obtained. Some grains and beans
have higher concentrations of certain essen-
tial aminos that are found lacking in other
grains and beans. A variety of fresh vegeta-
bles in your diet also contribute to boosting
your essential amino acid levels. It is actually
natures way of telling you that you should
eat a variety of vegan foods to live healthy.
The following includes a recipe that mimics
animal flesh in its balance of essential amino
acids. Seitan Supreme is fortified with
wheat, soy and corn flours and presents itself
as a perfect protein, as it contains a strong
balance of all the essential amino acids. This
illustrates the point that by combining natural
plant based foods one can easily produce
perfect protein products.
Rest assured that achieving a perfect pro-
tein is not necessary in your diet. A well bal-
anced diet with fruit, vegetables, nuts, grains,
beans and veggie meats (such as gluten
steak, TVP, tofu, tempeh or basic seitan) pro-
vide all of the essential amino acids needed
by your body.
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Basic 5eitan
This is the basic formu|a for exce||ent
homemade seitan. Can be used as
stew meat or 'beef' chunks in sautes,
soups, cassero|es and more!
Thoroughly sift and combine the flour with the vital wheat gluten and salt,
then add the water. Use your hands to mix into a firm dough. Allow
dough to rest for at least 15 minutes.
After rest period, knead the dough with your hands as you would a bread
loaf for about one minute. Allow dough to rest again for another 5-15
minutes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup unbleached white flour
3 1/2 cups vital wheat gluten
1 tsp salt
3 cups cold water
4 qts Vegetable Stock
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After second rest period, knead dough as before but this time dig deeper
with your fingers until dough thins at center. Continuing this motion, cen-
ter will tear away, leaving a doughnut shaped rope of raw seitan.
Wet hands lightly and place rope on a cutting board. Cut rope at some
point and then slice inch thick rounds off of seitan dough rope. Have
stock boiling on the stove and commence tossing the seitan medallions
into the pot, making sure that medallions dont stick to each other. Cover
pot, reduce heat to medium and boil seitan for a minimum of 20 minutes.
When cooking period is finished, remove seitan chunks from stock pot
using a small strainer to pick them out of the pot. Place cooked seitan in a
bowl or container for cooling. Cooked seitan will not stick together so no
need to worry about putting all the pieces together.
Seitan medallions are now ready for use, and can be used whole,
chopped, or sliced. Prepared cuts should then always be pan seared in a
small amount of oil before using in meals.
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5eitan 5upreme
This recipe for seitan is fortified with
corn and soy f|ours to create a meat-
|ike substance with a|| 8 essentia|
amino acids.
Prepare the seitan supreme exactly as in the recipe for Basic Seitan.
Thoroughly sift and combine the flour with the vital wheat gluten, corn
meal and salt, then add the water. Mix well and knead dough lightly.
Allow to rest 20 minutes. Knead once more and let rest another 10 min-
utes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup unbleached white flour
3 cups vital wheat gluten
1/4 cup fine grain corn meal
1/4 cup soy flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
2 & 3/4 cups cold water
4 qts Vegetable Stock
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Form into dough ring, slice up and cook in the vegetable stock. Makes 25
to 30 medallions, 2 & 1/2 inches in diameter. See Basic Seitan recipe,
for additional details.
5eitan De|uxe
Another fortified seitan meat
product. This one features minced
vegetab|es for boosting nutrition and
f|avor. An interesting foodstuff that
can be used in a variety of ways.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2/3 cup unbleached white flour (organic)
2 cups vital wheat gluten
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 & 3/4 cups water
4 qts Vegetable Stock
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Thoroughly sift and combine the flour with the vital wheat gluten, garlic
powder, baking powder and salt. Drain the diced vegetables on a paper
towel, then thoroughly combine them into the dry flour mix. Add the
water and try to keep veggies well distributed while gently mixing. Allow
dough ball to rest for 20 minutes.
After first rest period, knead dough gently. The diced vegetables make the
kneading process a little tricky. Let dough rest another 10 to 20 minutes.
After second rest period, knead dough into dough-ring as described in the
recipe for Basic Seitan. As an alternative you can pat or roll dough twice
its size on a floured board and then cut into steaks. Cook as directed in
Basic Seitan recipe.
1 cup mixed: carrots, onions, mushrooms,
colored bell peppers - finely diced
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Perfect G|uten F|ank 5teak
Can be used in various recipes, just
as one uses raw meat, and
substitutes we|| for chicken, beef or
vea|. Extreme|y high in protein and
simi|ar in texture to anima| f|esh.
NOTE: Carefully following directions, is imperative to the success of this
recipe. Exact proportions and precise set time, determine the success of
this process. The result is a thin steak with excellent texture, pliability and
taste!
Sift then pour the measured vital wheat gluten into a mixing bowl. Next
pour in the water and mix thoroughly, but briefly, then pat mass to flatten
slightly. Do this in less than one minute and only with your hands.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups vital wheat gluten
2 & 1/2 cups cold water
2 qts Vegetable Stock
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Allow mass to set up for 60 minutes. Gluten should now appear to be
glossy and will have expelled any unused water. Test mass by gently tug-
ging on an edge. If gluten surface tears slightly and doesnt stretch well,
wait an additional five minutes. Test also by running your finger over the
surface of the mass. If the skin tears, its not ready. If only an ounce, or
more, of extra water is used, set time could increase to 90 minutes or
more.
Cut gluten mass into 8 equal pieces. Using a rolling pin and a cool flat
surface (such as a stainless steel table), carefully roll gluten piece into an
almost paper-thin irregular shape.*
Have well flavored vegetable stock boiling on the stove. Drop each steak
into the stock as soon as it is rolled out. Do not allow any set time after
rolling out steak before cooking it. Any modifications to these instructions
will result in a mushy steak, that easily breaks apart, or a rubbery - shoe
leather - textured product.
Boil steaks in preheated stock, covered, for a minimum of ten minutes, or
a maximum period of 30 minutes. Carefully remove steaks from stock pot
with tongs or by straining off stock. Steaks should rest for 15 minutes or
more before handling as they could easily tear while theyre still hot.
Allow them to gradually cool to room temperature. Dont attempt to
plunge into cold water or cool rapidly! After this period, steaks are ready
to be used as meat.
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*NOTE: The explanation for this is simple, as there must be a minimum of
protein fibers flowing in the same direction for producing a perfect,
unleavened gluten flank steak.
New York G|uten 5trip
A|most identica| in appearance and
f|avor to a cut of beef, with high
protein content. Don't forget those
steak knives!
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/4 cups Vegetable Stock
1 Tbsp soy oil
1 lb package soft tofu
2 1/2 cups vital wheat gluten
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 cup Grill Goddess Sauce
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Have 2 & 1/4 cups of vegetable stock at (or below) room temperature,
and mix the soy oil into this stock. Place tofu into food processor and
begin processing while slowly pouring in prepared stock solution.
Thoroughly mix vital wheat gluten with salt and baking powder in a large
mixing bowl. Now, quickly and evenly stir in strained tofu-stock liquid,
into the dry flour mix. Pat mixture down with your hands or spatula and
allow to set for one hour.
Grease a medium sized casserole dish and preheat oven to 450F.
Remove the ready gluten mass to a table or board and slice, as you would
a pie, into 5-6 pieces. Carefully knead pieces by gently rubbing, tugging
and twisting steaks. Brush a little oil on the bottom of each steak then
place these strips into the greased dish and brush tops of steaks with Grill
Goddess sauce. Cover with foil and roast for 35 minutes.
Remove foil and turn steaks. Baste with the additional Grill Goddess
sauce and bake another 10 minutes uncovered. Remove from oven.
Steaks should appear fairly dry and puffed up. Steaks are now ready to
grill, broil or store refrigerated. Note: When re-cooking steaks, add
plenty of vegetable stock, as this will restore them to a thick, juicy condi-
tion.
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5outhern Fried G|uten
Cut|et
This recipe for 5outhern Fried
G|uten is a great substitute for fried
chicken. Great texture and great
f|avor high|ight the resu|t.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/4 cups vital wheat gluten
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp powdered thyme
1 tsp powdered savory
1/2 tsp powdered sage
1 Tbsp soy oil
1 Tbsp nutritional yeast
3 cups Vegetable Stock
3/4 lb package firm tofu
1 cup unbleached white flour
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Thoroughly mix vital wheat gluten with baking powder and salt, then set
aside. Mix the herbs, oil and nutritional yeast into the vegetable stock.
Pour 1/2 cup of this stock into a separate cup and set aside for later use.
Using a blender, mix remainder (2 & 1/2 cups) of vegetable stock (make
sure this stock is at room temperature or cooler) with firm tofu. Combine
(in a medium sized mixing bowl) tofu-stock liquid with the prepared gluten
powder mixture. Mix well, but for only a few moments, as this can upset
the texture. Pat down surface and allow to set for 45 minutes.
Grease an 8x12 casserole dish and preheat oven to 425F. When set,
gently knead gluten mass, then place onto a clean surface and evenly
slice into 12 pieces. Place gluten cuts into the casserole dish and baste
with a little oil. Cover with foil and bake for 25 minutes.
Remove foil from baking dish from oven. Pour in the 1/2 cup of additional
vegetable stock and use a metal spatula to loosen and turn pieces over.
Bake another 10 minutes uncovered to dry out and set gluten. Let glu-
ten pieces rest and cool. Once cooled, add the remaining vegetable stock
and allow oven dried gluten pieces to rehydrate.
When gluten pieces are cooled you can bread and fry them like chicken.
Simply dredge first in the flour then the soy milk and finally the bread
(or whole wheat flour)
1/2 cup soy milk
1 cup unseasoned bread crumbs
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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crumbs. Fry in a hot pan at medium heat, covered, until well browned.
Serve hot or cold.
Note: This tasty gluten recipe follows the same basic rules as the recipe for
New York gluten strip, the difference lies essentially with the flavorings
and cuts.
Chicken Fried G|uten Cut|et
These breaded cut|ets can be used
for a variety of purposes. Use them
in sandwiches or sautes, with
de|icious resu|ts.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup unbleached white flour
(or whole wheat flour)
1/4 cup soy milk
1/2 cup unseasoned bread crumbs
1 (or more) Perfect Gluten Flank Steak -
cutlets (alternatively: tofu
or tempeh cutlets)
(as needed) soy oil (for frying)
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Put the flour, soy milk and bread crumbs into individual bowls. Take steak
or cutlets (whole or sliced into desired shapes and sizes), first dredge in
flour, then dip floured pieces into the soy milk, and finally coat with bread
crumbs.
Heat a skillet and add enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan. fry each
breaded cutlet on both sides to brown evenly. Cutlets are ready to serve
or incorporate into another dish. Cutlets breaded and fried can be stored
refrigerated for several days before using.
G|uten Rou|ade
An exce||ent examp|e of the
versati|ity of our g|uten f|ank steak.
This one exce|s over beef!
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Tbsps olive oil
1 cup portabella mushroom - sliced
2 cups raw spinach - shredded
3 tsps garlic clove - minced
1/2 cup fresh parsley - minced
2 pinches salt and black pepper
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Heat a saut pan (or skillet) and olive oil, then gradually add sliced porta-
bella mushrooms, shredded spinach, minced garlic and fresh parsley, salt
and pepper. Lay the flank steak on a flat surface and spread the cooked
saute mixture evenly over entire steak. Sprinkle the soy parmesan cheese
over this spread.
Starting with the side nearest you, begin rolling up the filled steak until
you have a cylinder shape. Holding this together in your hands, carefully
dredge roulade in the flour.
Heat a skillet and add the soy oil. Gently lay the roulade in the hot oil and
lower heat to medium. Cover and fry for 3 minutes. Uncover and gently
turn roulade to brown another of three total sides. As sides brown, rou-
lade stiffens and begins to maintain its own shape. When all sides have
been browned, remove roulade and transfer it to a small baking dish with
a little marinara sauce covering the bottom. Cover roulade with more
marinara and soy cheese (optional) and bake for 10 minutes in a 450F
oven.
1 large Perfect Gluten Flank Steak
3 Tbsps soy parmesan cheese - grated
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/4 cup soy oil
1 cup Marinara Sauce
2 Tbsps soy mozzarella cheese -grated (optional)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Desserts
Introduction In this chapter well investigate the sweet
world of desserts, cookies and confections.
You will learn the fundamentals of vegan
dessert making and the relationship of
common elements. Youll discover that
working without eggs or dairy can be eas-
ier than you thought, with great results.
Decades ago, people believed the more
eggs and dairy you could put into some-
thing, the healthier it was. Good health
was not equated with vitamins, enzymes,
complex carbohydrates or clean proteins,
but with sustaining power or, how well food
stuck to your ribs. Meat, dairy and eggs
were good, vegetables and fruits were
canned.
The health movement in America, spawned
in the 1970s, has defined our current
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understanding of what healthy foods are. A
movement that was once recognized for
yogurt and goat cheese has evolved into a
completely plant based movement with icons
such as silken tofu and vegan meat analogs.
In this Chapter well examine a number of
recipes from cookies to cakes and pies. Youll
learn how to use egg substitutes for binding,
silken tofu for body, and various natural
sweeteners. Also included, basics for making
great pie crusts, mixing wet and dry ingredi-
ents for cakes and cookies, and baking
instructions.
As with all of the recipes in this book, those
included in this chapter are intended inspire
and teach. Once the dedicated chef under-
stands his materials and has worked some
examples, a world of possibilities for new cre-
ations will be at your command!
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App|e 5auce Doughnuts
A great way to make vegan
doughnuts with the autumna| f|avors
of app|e and ho|iday spices.
Beat the sugar with the egg substitute, apple sauce and margarine. Sift or
mix flour, baking powder, salt and spices in another bowl. Next, fold the
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup raw sugar (or fructose, or xylitol)
3 Tbsps Egg Substitute
1 cup apple sauce
1/4 cup soy margarine - melted
4 cups unbleached white flour
2 Tbsps baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 pinches cinnamon
1 pinch nutmeg
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wet ingredients into the dry ingredients, carefully, with a few slow strokes.
This is to prevent excess gluten development, resulting in a tough dough-
nut.
Turn the resulting dough mass onto a floured board and gently roll out the
dough to 1/4 inch thickness. Next cut the doughnut shape with 2 round
cookie cutters of unequal diameter or use a doughnut cutting tool. Place
cut doughnut rings and doughnut balls on a lightly floured cookie sheet
and let rest 15 minutes.
Heat a large cast iron skillet and add 1 cup of soy oil. If you are using a
deep fryer have oil at 350F. Begin frying doughnuts and doughnut balls,
on one side for 2-3 minutes, turn and fry the other side another 2 min-
utes. Remove from fryer or skillet and allow to drain well. Decorate with
cake icing or use as an interesting dessert.
App|e Pie
What's better than Mom's app|e pie.
This recipe is rooted in the great
American homesty|e tradition, yet is
entire|y vegan.
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Peel, core and slice apples into thin wedges. Squeeze the lemon juice into
the bowl with apple slices and mix well. This will prevent browning of the
apples and adds zest to the flavor.
Now mix in the spices, sugar (or xylitol) and cornstarch. Roll out half the
dough to a thickness of about one eighth inch and place into a greased
pie dish or pan. Prick holes around crust and paint oil or melted marga-
rine on surface.
Dump the apple mix into the prepared pie shell and then roll out other
half of dough. Brush a little cold water around rim of pie shell and place
top crust over apples. Using a fork, crimp down the edge around the pie,
MEASURE INGREDIENT
8 Granny Smith apples
1 lemon - juiced
1 tsp allspice
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp ginger powder
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
3 Tbsps cornstarch
(as needed) Basic Pie Crust dough
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locking the two crusts together. Prick holes or cut slits into crust to release
steam.
Bake in a 425F oven for 45 minutes or until juice begins to ooze and pie
crust is browned and firm. To prevent burning of the crust edge, crimp a
thin strip of tin foil around edge while baking.
Baked Custard
Traditiona||y made with |ots of eggs
and mi|k, this vegan version tastes
great, sets up we||, and is actua||y
good for you.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 12-oz packages silken-firm tofu
1/2 cup soy milk (or fruit juice)
4 tsps Egg Substitute
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
1 tsp xanthum gum
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Blend all ingredients. Grease custard cups and fill each one with mixture.
Preheat oven to 350F. Place cups in a pan with water and put this in the
hot oven. Bake 30 minutes and test with a knife or toothpick. If toothpick
comes out free of custard, its done.
For an alternative usage, pour blended custard in a pie shell and bake 30
minutes. Scatter slivered almonds on top after 20 minutes in the oven.
Banana Cake
This cake is one of our customer
favorites with its homespun f|avor
and |ight texture, it wi|| become one
of your favorites, too.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/2 cup soy margarine
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 Tbsps Egg Substitute
2 cups unbleached white flour
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In a large mixing bowl, blen sugar with margarine, vanilla and egg substi-
tute. Sift 1 cup of the flour with salt, baking powder and baking soda into
same mixing bowl. Cream this well together.
Next, blend in the ripe bananas with the soy milk and vinegar. When well
blended, add the remaining flour and chopped nuts and mix to incorpo-
rate.
Pour batter into a well greased 9x 13 baking pan and bake at 350F for
about 35 minutes. Test for doneness with a toothpick, cake wire or fork.
When cooled, ice with Mocha Frosting.
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
2 ripe bananas - mashed
1/4 cup soy milk
2 Tbsps apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup walnuts - chopped (optional)
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Banana F|ambe
An appetizing dessert, made with
fresh bananas {or other tropica|
fruit). lt's quick and easy, and an
exce||ent way to top off a Pacific Rim
or Meso-American dinner.
Peel and slice bananas into discs a quarter of an inch thick. Heat a skillet
on the stove and add margarine. Dump in banana slices and toss pan fre-
quently under high heat. After two minutes add rum or cognac and toss
for another minute. CAUTION!!! Pan will flame up after alcohol is added.
Serve immediately on a dessert plate with a slice of orange.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 ripe bananas
2 Tbsps soy margarine
1 shot rum liquor (or cognac)
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Basic Pie Crust
This recipe is for an a||-purpose
wheat pie crust that is easy to make
and goes we|| with most types of pie.
From app|e to berry, pumpkin or
meringue, this crust stands up we||, is
|ight and tastes good.
Mix the flour and remove 1/4 cup to a small bowl. Mix the cold water with
this 1/4 cup of flour into a wet slurry or paste, and set aside.
Mix the remaining dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl. Making sure
the soy margarine or oil is about 70F, cut this into the dry mix, using a
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/4 cup ice cold water
1 tsp baking powder
2 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/2 tsp salt
3/4 cup soy margarine (or soy oil)
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pastry cutter. Cut until mixture is granulated into small beads.
Next, evenly distribute the slurry over the cut flour mix and then mix it in
thoroughly. Use your hands to knead dough for about one minute. Mold
dough into a ball and refrigerate before using.
When ready to use for pie crust, remove dough from refrigeration and cut
in half. Flour a board and roll one half of the dough into a large round
disc about on eighth inch thick. Grease a pie dish and lay dough inside.
Paint pie crust with margarine or oil before adding filling and prick holes
in it with a fork. Use other half of dough to roll out for pies top crust.
Basic Pie Crust ll
Another basic pie crust, this version
is somewhat simp|er to make. This
recipe is |ighter than os|c P|e Crost,
as it uses on|y unb|eached white
f|our.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
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Put dry ingredients in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse to combine. Next
combine the margarine by adding small amounts between more pulsing
until all the margarine is combined. Mixture should now appear mealy.
Continue to pulse while adding the ice water slowly to the meal until the
texture changes to a stiff dough. Be careful not to add too much ice water.
Chill dough well until ready for use then follow directions for rolling out
dough and forming pie crusts as illustrated in the Basic Pie Crust recipe.
1 cup soy margarine (chilled)
1/4-1/2 cup water - ice cold
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Bavarian Cream Pie
With a|| the rich f|avor and body of
the c|assic dairy version, this vegan
recipe creates a |ight creamy,
uncooked fi||ing for pies or stuffed
pastries.
Heat the soy milk and dissolve the sugar in it. Soak the agar agar in the
cold water for several minutes, then add this to the heated milk. Slowly
bring this to a boil then remove from heat and allow to cool, refrigerated.
When cooled down, but before it has completely set up, add vanilla
extract and fold whipped cream into mixture. Use this finished cream fill-
ing in cooled pie crusts for refrigerated cream pies, or place in parfait
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 & 1/4 cups soy milk
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
2 Tbsps agar agar flakes
1/4 cup cold water
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup Whipped Cream
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glasses to chill until serving. Chill down to 40F before serving. You can
also put the Bavarian cream filling into a pastry decorating bag and fill
pastries to make stuffed doughnuts or eclairs.
Berry Pie
B|ueberry, cherry, strawberry or wi|d
berry pies are wonderfu| desserts,
and easy to make too.
If using frozen berries, thaw out berries and pour off some of the excess
juice before adding the sugar cornstarch. Roll the dough, fill the pie and
bake as instructed in recipe for Apple Pie.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4 cups fresh berries (or frozen)
3 Tbsps raw sugar (or xylitol)
3 Tbsps cornstarch
(as needed) Basic Pie Crust dough
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Birch 5ugar 5yrup
This easy syrup is tasty and usefu| for
different app|ications. lt's natura||y
c|ear in appearance, and can
substitute for map|e syrup.
In a small sauce pan stir together the xylitol and water while heating to a
boil. Simmer to reduce until syrup has thickened but still flows. Use
immediately, as syrup will set up as it cools (can be thinned with a little
warm water).
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup xylitol (birch sugar)
1/4 cup water
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Brownies
Everybody |oves brownies, especia||y
kids. This recipe is entire|y vegan but
has a|| the f|avor and richness as
traditiona| brownies.
Combine and sift all dry ingredients together and set aside. Melt marga-
rine and add to it the sugar and vanilla. Combine this with one third of
the dry mix until smooth. Repeat this procedure with the next third of dry
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 & 1/4 cups unbleached white flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
3/4 cup cocoa
1/4 tsp salt
1 Tbsp Egg Substitute
1 cup soy margarine
2 cups raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
2 tsps vanilla extract
1 cup non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
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mix. Then mix in the last third of the dry mix until batter is complete.
Next, fold chips into the batter then spread into a 9 x 9 baking pan.
Bake at 350F for 25-35 minutes. Test for doneness by poking with a fork
or toothpick. If it comes out clean, brownies are done. Cool and cut into
squares.
Brown Rice Pudding
This hea|thy dessert wi|| forever be a
stap|e of vegetarian cuisine. This is
our restaurant version.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups Brown Rice - cooked
3 cups soy milk
1 cup raisins
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
3 Tbsps sucanat (or xylitol, or brown rice syrup)
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp cinnamon
4 tsps Egg Substitute
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Grease a small, deep casserole dish. Blend all ingredients and pour mix-
ture into casserole dish. Bake at 350F for 30 minutes. Allow pudding to
cool and refrigerate before serving.
Brown 5ugar 5tars
Here is an interesting technique that
produces de|ightfu| carame|ized
sugar patterns or pictures to
decorate custard pies, cakes or
parfaits.
Heat oven broiler. Spray oil or paint over one side of the aluminum foil.
Make sure the brown sugar is dark brown and is moist and crumbles eas-
ily.
1/4 cup cold water
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
(as needed) vegetable oil spray (or soy oil)
1 piece aluminum foil
(as needed) brown sugar
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Using your fingers mold the outline of a desired picture or pattern 1/4
inch thick on the greased side of the foil. Put the foil with patterns on a
cookie sheet and place under the hot broiler. Leave the oven door open
and keep close eye on the sugar patterns to watch for burning. When the
sugar is caramelized, remove from oven and reverse the foil unto a cool
surface. Once cooled, the sugar stars or patterns can be easily removed
from foil. Refrigerate in wax paper until ready for use.
Choco|ate Drop Cookies
This age o|d ho|iday cookie recipe is
easi|y converted to vegan. These
cookies distinguish themse|ves with
both f|avor and appearance.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 Eggless Egg (or 2 tsps Egg Substitute)
3 Tbsps water
1/2 cup soy margarine
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup unbleached white flour
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Preheat oven to 375F and grease a large cookie sheet. Beat together the
eggless egg (or egg substitute) with the 3 tablespoons of water in a bowl
with the margarine (room temperature), sugars and vanilla.
In another bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, chopped nuts, salt and
chocolate chips. Add the premixed eggless egg mixture into the dry mix-
tures bowl. Beat this together and drop the resultant batter onto the
cookie sheet with a teaspoon. Bake 10 - 12 minutes. Cool and serve.
Makes 40 - 50 cookies.
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup nuts - chopped
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Choco|ate Mousse
Can be served chi||ed in parfait
g|asses or in a baked pie she||. The
|ight texture is achieved by whipping
the egg rep|acer and fo|ding it into
the hot pudding before it has set.
Melt the chocolate chips and blend with the silken tofu, agar agar flakes,
and sugar in a blender. Mix cornstarch with 1/4 cup soy milk and set
aside.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
12 ozs non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
2 12-oz packages silken tofu
1 Tbsp agar agar flakes
2/3 cup raw sugar (or evaporated cane juice,
or xylitol, or fructose)
1 Tbsp cornstarch
1/2 cup soy milk
2 Tbsps Egg Substitute
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Pour blended contents into a sauce pan and add cornstarch-soy milk mix-
ture. Stir blend while heating slowly until mixture is hot enough to start to
thicken. Meanwhile use an electric mixer to whip the egg substitute with
1/4 cup cold soy milk, into stiff peaks.
Next, transfer pudding to a mixing bowl and proceed to fold the whipped
egg substitute mixture with the hot pudding. Pour prepared pudding into
parfait glasses or baked pie shell and chill. Serve refrigerated.
Choco|ate Peanut Butter
Cheesecake
A de|icious and who|esome dessert,
fu|| bodied and simi|ar in texture to
the |acto/ovo version. A piece of this
pie has about the same nutrition as a
sandwich.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup soy margarine
3 cups chocolate flavored graham crackers -
crumbled
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Melt the margarine and mix it into the crumbled graham crackers. Grease
an 8 inch spring form and mold your cracker mix around the inside sides
of the spring form and also the bottom to form the crust.
Pour half the oil out of the peanut butter jar and then combine the peanut
butter, tofu, egg substitute, sucanat and vanilla into a mixing bowl. Melt
the chocolate chips in a pan on a low flame until chips are melted then
add melted chocolate to mixing bowl.
Transfer contents of mixing bowl to a blender or food processor and blend
well. Pour this mixture into the spring form with molded cracker crust.
Bake in a preheated oven at 400F for 45 minutes. Allow to cool to room
temperature then refrigerate. Serve cold decorated or undecorated.
2 cups creamy - natural peanut butter
2 12-oz packages silken-firm tofu
3 tsps Egg Substitute
1/2 cup sucanat (or xylitol)
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 lbs non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Choco|ate Tofu lcing
This great, creamy icing is made with
a base of si|ken-firm tofu i||ustrating
the versati|ity of this substance. A
c|assic app|ication is the Trip|e
Choco|ate Cake.
Melt chips in a skillet at very low flame until melted. An alternative
method is to microwave at full power for 40 - 45 seconds.
Combine silken-firm tofu with melted chips in a food processor or blender
and blend until smooth. Ice cake when cooled with this frosting, which
should be kept cool as well. Recipe creates generous portion with plenty
extra to fill cake between cake layers.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
6 ozs non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
1 12-oz package silken-firm tofu
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Christmas Logs
These happy |itt|e Christmas cookies
are a hit for the ho|idays and great
for decorating.
Cream the margarine, vanilla and rum. Gradually add in the sugar and
cream well. Next beat in the eggless eggs. Sift the flour with the nutmeg
and stir this into the wet mixture slowly while beating vigorously.
Shape the dough into long, narrow rolls and cut into logs on the bias.
Bake logs in a 350F oven, on a greased cookie sheet, for 12 to 15 min-
utes. Decorate or serve plain.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup soy margarine (room temperature)
2 tsps vanilla extract
2 tsps rum liquor
3/4 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
2 Eggless Eggs
3 cups unbleached white flour
1 tsp nutmeg
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Coconut Cream Pie
5imp|e and de|icious pie with a|| the
f|avor and body of the more fami|iar
dairy and egg version.
Combine all ingredients in food processor and blend smooth. Pour into
pre-baked pie shell and bake in a 350F oven for 45 minutes. Cool and
serve pie chilled.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 & 1/2 12-oz packages silken tofu
1 cup unsweetened coconut flakes
3/4 cup raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
1 cup soy milk
1/3 cup Egg Substitute
1 tsp coconut extract
1 tsp vanilla extract
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Crust Cookies
Here's a homespun way to use extra
pie crust for quick cookies. Kids |ove
them.
Roll out the pie dough to a thickness of about 1/8 inch. Use a cookie cut-
ter to cut out desired shapes. Grease a cookie sheet and place cutouts on
sheets. Sprinkle the sugar over the cookies and bake in a preheated oven
at 400F for about 15 minutes.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
fist-sized ball Basic Pie Crust dough
1/4 cup raw sugar
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Egyptian Date Nut Candy
Here is a tasty raw food candy that
packs a|ot of energy and nutrition.
Kids |ove them...ro||ed in roasted
sesame seeds, they are irresistib|e.
Combine the sunflower seeds and almonds into a food processor with
chopping blade attachment. Pulse until seeds and nuts are coarsely
ground. Remove this to a bowl.
Place the dates, figs and raisins in the emptied food processor and add the
water. Process until mass is thick and pasty. Add this to the ground nuts
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup sunflower seeds
1/2 cup almonds
2 cups pitted dates
1/2 cup figs - chopped
1 cup raisins
1/4 cup water
1 cup roasted sesame seeds
(or unsweetened coconut flakes)
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and seeds and mash together well with clean hands. Form balls or small
barrels from this mixture and roll these in the roasted sesame seeds (or
coconut flakes). They are ready to serve and will keep well in the refriger-
ator.
German Choco|ate lcing /
Fi||ing
This rich, choco|ate cake icing
combines the f|avor of coffee and
coconut. Makes a Great topping or
fi||ing between |ayers of your favorite
Choco|ate or Wh|te Coke.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 & 1/2 12-oz packages silken tofu
2/3 cup maple syrup (or brown rice syrup)
1/4 cup soy oil
2 tsps vanilla extract
1 tsp instant coffee
1/2 cup pecans - chopped
1/2 cup unsweetened coconut flakes
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Combine tofu, maple syrup, oil, vanilla and coffee in a food processor and
blend until smooth. Pour this mixture into a bowl. Fold in the chopped
pecans and the coconut flakes. Allow this blend to cool down and then
refrigerate. Use this chilled mix to ice and fill your favorite chocolate cake.
Ginger Bread Cookies
These tasty cookies are a|ways a hit
with chi|dren on the ho|idays, as they
can be cut into different shapes and
decorated. Traditiona| to Germany
and America.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/4 cup molasses
1/4 cup water
1/3 cup soy margarine (room temperature)
2 pinches powdered cloves
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp ginger powder
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Beat the sugar, molasses and water with the margarine in one bowl and
sift the spices, baking soda, salt and flour in another bowl. Mix the wet
ingredients into dry ingredients in three stages forming a dough ball.
Allow dough to rest, refrigerated for at least 15 minutes, then roll out the
dough to about 1/8 in thickness. Use a cookie cutter to make shapes
then bake 12 minutes at 350F, on a greased cookie sheet.
Graham Cracker Pie Crust
This crunchy and f|avorfu| crust is
easy to make and very effective.
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
3 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
8 ozs graham crackers
1/4 cup soy margarine - melted
1 Tbsp raw sugar (or xylitol)
1/4 cup unsweetened coconut flakes (optional)
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Crush graham crackers in a food processor. Add melted margarine and
sugar and process until mixture is well combined. Press mixture into a
greased pie pan. Add favorite your pie filling, custard or other, and bake.
Key Lime Pie
Anyone who has ever eaten Key
Lime Pie wi|| never forget its
distinctive f|avor! One bite of this
vegan de|ight wi|| a|most transport
you to the sunny ato||s of the
Caribbean.
In a sauce pan, heat key lime juice to a boil. Stir in the agar agar flakes.
Reduce the heat to a simmer and continue to stir in the agar agar until it is
completely dissolved. Set this aside.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3/4 cup key lime juice
1 Tbsp agar agar flakes
2 12-oz packages silken tofu
3/4 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1 Graham Cracker Pie Crust shell
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Using a food processor, blend the tofu and sugar until it is smooth and
creamy. Next add the key lime-agar agar blend to the contents of the pro-
cessor and pulse this in. Pour this final mixture into a graham cracker
crust shell and bake at 350F for 20 minutes. Chill before serving.
Miso Mincemeat Pie
This interesting dessert is a great
companion to pumpkin pie, or other
ho|iday treat. With app|es, raisins,
nutmeats and miso, it mimics the
f|avor and body of the Co|onia|
American version.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
4 Granny Smith apples - cored & diced
1/2 cup apple juice
1 orange - juiced
1 orange rind - grated
1 & 1/2 cups raisins
2 cups nutmeats (walnuts) - chopped
1/2 tsp cinnamon
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Peel, core and dice the apples, then place them in a pot with the apple
juice, orange juice, orange rind and the raisins. Heat this to a boil, then
simmer for 30 minutes. Add the chopped nutmeats, cinnamon, cloves,
ginger and miso and remove the pot from the stove.
Pre-bake the crust and then fill with the cooled contents from the pot.
Cover pie filling with a lattice of pie crust strips. Bake pie for 45 minutes
at 350F.
1/4 tsp cloves
1/2 tsp ginger powder
2 Tbsps miso paste
1 Basic Pie Crust, or
Basic Pie Crust II
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Mocha Frosting
This de|icious icing goes great with
your favorite Choco|ate Cake,
ooooo Coke or rowo|es. This vegan
frosting has a choco|ate and coffee
base for that specia| mocha f|avor.
With margarine at room temperature, mix with sugar and cocoa until well
incorporated. Add hot coffee and blend until smooth and creamy. Stir in
the vanilla and allow to cool. Spread on cakes with a butter knife or small
rubber spatula. When cake is completely iced you may sprinkle chopped
nuts or vegan candy sprinkles for an additional touch. Keep iced cake
covered or chilled, for best results.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
6 Tbsps soy margarine
1 & 1/2 cups raw sugar (or xylitol)
2 cups powdered sugar
1 tsp cocoa
3 Tbsps brewed coffee (strong & hot)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
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Oatmea| Raisin Cookies
This cookie has a|| the f|avor,
richness, and texture of the origina|.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup soy margarine
1 cup dark brown sugar
1/2 cup xylitol (or brown rice syrup)
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 Tbsps Egg Substitute
(or 2 Eggless Eggs)
1/4 cup water
1 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon
1 cup raisins
3 cups rolled oats
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Preheat oven to 350F. Have margarine warmed to room temperature
and combine with the brown sugar, xylitol and vanilla. Whisk the egg
substitute with the 1/4 cup of water and then beat this into the margarine
mixture.
Combine the flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, raisins and oats
together in another bowl. Make a well in the center of this dry mix and
pour in the contents of the bowl with the margarine. Mix this well with a
rubber spatula to form a stiff batter.
Grease a cookie sheet or baking pan and drop spoon sized dollops onto
the sheet. Bake 10 to 12 minutes until lightly browned. Cool a few min-
utes and serve. Makes 40 - 50 cookies.
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O|d Fashion Choco|ate
Fudge
Crave fudge, but want it without the
excess fat and cho|estero|! This
recipe produces a smooth-rich candy
that everyone can enjoy. Great for
cake frostings, too!
Grease sides of a two quart sauce pan. Combine sugar, milk, chocolate
and maple or malt syrup. Stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves and
mixture comes to a boil. Continue heating past boiling point to about
230F. Remove pan from heat. Add margarine and cool mixture to room
temperature.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
3/4 cup soy milk
2 ozs non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
1 tsp maple syrup (or malt syrup)
2 Tbsps soy margarine
1 tsp vanilla extract
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Add vanilla to the cooled mixture and beat vigorously with a hand whisk
or electric mixer until fudge thickens and loses its gloss. Grease a shallow
baking pan and spread fudge evenly over bottom. Score surface for cut-
ting into pieces while fudge is still warm. Cut into pieces after fudge is
thoroughly cooled.
As an addition to the basic recipe, a 1/2 cup of chopped nuts may be
added to the bottom of the baking pan and the fudge spread over top.
Peanut Butter Chip
Brownies
Another kind of brownie...with
crunchy peanut butter!
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/2 cup non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
1 tsp baking powder
1 Tbsp Egg Substitute
1 & 1/2 cups raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
1 cup crunchy - natural peanut butter
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Combine and sift dry ingredients and set aside. Using a food processor
cream sugar, peanut butter and soy margarine until smooth and fluffy.
Add dry ingredients in two shifts, incorporating fully between each shift.
Remove from food processor to a mixing bowl, and then fold in the chips.
Pour batter into a greased 9 x 9 baking pan. Bake for 25-35 minutes.
Test for doneness with a fork or toothpick. Cut and serve chilled.
Pumpkin Pie
What cou|d be more traditiona| than
pumpkin pie on the ho|idays. This
recipe wi|| provides a|| the joy and
memories of Mom's...vegan sty|e!
1/2 cup soy margarine
MEASURE INGREDIENT
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups pumpkin - cooked
1 cup soy milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
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Start by obtaining a medium sized pumpkin. Cut pumpkin in half and
scoop out the seeds and stringy seed net. Next, slice the pumpkin into
manageable pieces and begin removing the soft inner flesh from the
tough outer skin. The best way to do this is by scoring the surface of the
inner flesh into a 1-2 inch matrix, then slicing off the cubes from the
outer skin.
Place the pumpkin cubes into a steamer and steam until soft (about 15
minutes). Next place steamed pumpkin in a food processor and blend
with all other ingredients.
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/4 cup raw sugar (or xylitol, or sucanat)
4 Eggless Eggs
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp ginger powder
1/2 tsp allspice
1 pinch cloves - powdered
1 pie shell - prebaked - using either
Basic Pie Crust, or Basic Pie Crust II,
or Graham Cracker Pie Crust
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Pour mixture into the prebaked pie shell and bake pie at 400F for 45
minutes. Serve cooled, plain or with vegan whipped cream
Ranger Cookies
These tasty cookies are great for the
ho|idays. P|ain or decorated, they're
a|ways a hit...with kids of a|| ages!
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 Eggless Eggs
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup soy margarine (room temperature)
2 cups unbleached white flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
2 cups rice crispies
2 cups rolled oats
1 tsp salt
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Beat the eggless eggs with the sugars, vanilla and margarine in one bowl.
In another bowl mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, rice crispies,
oatmeal and salt.
Fold the wet mixture into the dry mixture and add the nuts. Grease a
cookie sheet and drop batter onto sheet with a table spoon. Bake cookies
in a 350F oven for 30 minutes or until golden brown.
Serve with Whipped Cream or vegan-style ice cream.
5outhern 5ty|e Fruit
Cobb|er
This homesty|e de|ight is a seasona|
dessert, enhanced with fresh|y
picked {or f|ash frozen) berries.
1 cup chopped nuts
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Preheat oven to 375F. Place margarine in a 2-quart capacity casserole
dish and melt the margarine in the oven. Remove the baking dish when
the margarine is melted.
Mix berries (or sliced fresh fruit) with the half the sugar or xylitol in a bowl
and set aside. In another bowl, mix the flour, baking powder and the rest
of the sugar together.
Make a well in the center of the flour mixture and pour in the soy milk.
Mix gently by folding, into a batter and then pour this batter into the cas-
serole dish with the melted margarine. Bake about 45 minutes testing for
doneness with a toothpick, fork or cake tester.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1/4 cup soy margarine
4 cups berries (or peeled and sliced fresh fruit)
1 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1 & 1/2 cups unbleached white flour
4 tsps baking powder
1 & 1/2 cups soy milk
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5oy Mi|k Doughnuts
Yes, even these decadent treats can
be rendered vegan...with great
resu|ts!
Beat the sugar with the egg substitute, soy milk and margarine. Sift or mix
flour, baking powder, salt and spices in another bowl. Next, fold the wet
ingredients into the dry ingredients, carefully, with a few slow strokes. This
is to prevent excess gluten development resulting in a tough doughnut.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup raw sugar (or fructose, or xylitol)
3 Tbsps Egg Substitute
1 cup soy milk
1/4 cup soy margarine - melted
4 cups unbleached white flour
2 Tbsps baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 pinches cinnamon
1 pinch nutmeg
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Turn the resulting dough mass onto a floured board and gently roll out the
dough to 1/4 inch thickness. Next cut the doughnut shape with 2 round
cookie cutters of unequal diameter or use a doughnut cutting tool. Place
cut doughnut rings and doughnut balls on a lightly floured cookie sheet
and let rest 15 minutes.
Heat a large cast iron skillet and add 1 cup of soy oil. If you are using a
deep fryer have oil at 350F. Begin frying doughnuts and doughnut balls,
on one side for 2-3 minutes, turn and fry the other side another 2 min-
utes. Remove from fryer or skillet and allow to drain well. Decorate with
cake icing or use as an interesting dessert base.
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5tewed Pears
Easy to make and is a good way to
use-up ripe fruit. 5tewing pears a|so
renders them more digestib|e when
consumed with other foods.
Peel the pears, core them and slice the pears in half lengthwise. Mix the
water, brandy or cognac and sugars and pour this into a large, deep skil-
let. Place the pear halves in the skillet and bring this to a boil. Cover skil-
let, reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Pears should be soft and
liquid should be thickened like syrup. Serve halves individually in small
bowls with a few tablespoons of the syrup.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 (or more) pears - ripe
1/4 cup water
1/4 cup fruit brandy (or cognac)
1/4 cup raw sugar (or evaporated cane juice,
or xylitol, or fructose)
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5trawberry 5hortcake
Traditiona| 5pring dessert with fresh
strawberries and vegan whipped
cream.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups unbleached pastry flour
4 tsps baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
4 Tbsps raw sugar (or brown rice syrup)
1/2 cup soy margarine
3/4 cup soy milk
4 cups strawberries - chopped (sweetened)
1/2 cup raw sugar (or brown rice syrup)
2-3 cups Whipped Cream
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Mix dry ingredients and cut in margarine as shown in pie crust recipes.
Stir in soy milk and form dough ball with very little kneading.
Lightly flour a board and gently roll dough out to a one inch thickness.
Grease a baking pan or dish of the appropriate size and place dough
inside, patting down lightly to distribute dough evenly.
Bake in a 450F oven for 15 to 20 minutes. Test for doneness with a
toothpick. If toothpick comes out clean its probably done.
Slice the cake into squares and leave cake in pan. Mix strawberries with
raw sugar, then spoon over the cake and serve with whipped cream.
Trip|e Choco|ate Cake
A very popu|ar vegan choco|ate cake,
with the f|avor, texture, and richness
of typica| dairy and egg based cakes.
You wont be|ieve how good this is.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3/4 cup soy margarine
2 Tbsps Egg Substitute
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Have the margarine at room temperature (soft) and cream it with egg
substitute, raw suger and vanilla until smooth.
Thoroughly combine flour, with vital wheat gluten, cocoa, baking soda,
baking powder and salt, then sift this into creamed margarine mixture.
Use an electric mixer and slowly pour in the water while mixing. Beat well
until batter is smooth and glossy.
Pour batter into two 9 greased cake pans and bake at 350F for 30 to 35
minutes. Test for doneness with fork, toothpick or cake wire. Stack two
cakes with a layer of your favorite icing in between, and frost entire cake
with remainder of icing.
1 & 3/4 cups raw sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 cups unbleached white flour
2 Tbsp vital wheat gluten
3/4 cup cocoa
1 tsp baking soda
1/2-1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup water
MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Whipped Cream
Looks and tastes simi|ar to the high
fat and cho|estero| dairy
version...on|y, it's vegan!
Heat the agar agar flakes and water to a boil, while stirring. Remove from
heat then combine agar agar solution with all other ingredients in a food
processor and blend for 2-3 minutes. Put blended mixture back in refrig-
erator to chill. Before serving, beat with an electric mixer, then spoon on
dessert as a topping.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 tsp agar agar flakes (dissolved
in 3 Tbsps water)
2 Tbsps soy milk
1/2 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
1 12-oz package silken-firm tofu
2 tsps soy oil
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White Cake
A wonderfu|, a||-purpose recipe for
any occasion. Light and de|icious, ice
with your favorite vegan frosting.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2/3 cup soy milk
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp almond extract
1/2 cup soy margarine
1 cup raw sugar (or xylitol)
2 cups unbleached pastry flour
3 tsps baking powder
5 Tbsps Egg Substitute
1 cup water
1 lemon rind - grated
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Mix soy milk with vanilla and almond extracts, then set aside.
Have margarine at room temperature (soft) and cream with the sugar (or
xylitol). Sift flour with baking powder, then combine sweetened marga-
rine, alternating with the flavored soy milk mixture. Beat batter vigorously
until smooth.
Use an electric mixer and beat the egg substitute and grated lemon rind,
with the water, until it stiffens into peaks. Carefully fold stiffened egg sub-
stitute into batter. Pour batter into a 9 x 13 pan and bake at 375F for
30 minutes.
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Baby Food
Introduction You might be wondering, why a chapter on
baby food? Well, if you a have a small
child, this section will be of special interest
to you. Balanced nutrition is essential and
fortified soy milk is highly recommended to
supplement protein and vitamin require-
ments. Although babies and small children
dont usually care for certain flavors or
spicy food, they dont like their food bland
either. Just like adults, they want their fla-
vors balanced and their food cooked right.
The following is a complete diet for small
babies.
Included in this chapter are a few basic
vegan recipes that can can get you jump
started towards raising your child vegan.
A better title for this chapter might be A
childs First Foods because the simplest
foods should be the first food a child eats
after breast feeding. At the end of the
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chapter is a list of recipes found throughout
the book, that are suitable as baby foods.
Combining Baby
Foods
Proper food combining for best digestion is
an art seldom practiced by adults, and babies
are usually subjected to the same treatment.
Mixing fruit with vegetables (especially raw)
can result in vomiting and flu sometimes.
Cooking foods generally render them easier
to digest. A meal consisting of complex car-
bohydrates, fat, starch and protein is not diffi-
cult to digest when cooked together. The
same meal is almost impossible to digest and
assimilate if eaten raw. A good rule of thumb
is to eat raw fruits, vegetables or nuts sepa-
rately, allowing plenty of time between meals
for digestion.
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Baby's Fruit
Fruit is nature's perfect energy food.
lt contains Vitamin C, compounds,
enzymes, ce||u|ose roughage and
carbohydrates. Baby's first foods can
be pureed fruit or vegetab|es.
Blend fruit well in food processor if feeding a small baby.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup fruit - soft (Avoid excessive
citrus or too much sweet fruit,
such as soaked raisins.)
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Baby's Grains
Babies can begin eating cooked
grains that are mi|d and pureed, at
on|y a few months of age.
Blend grain with maple syrup, flax oil, salt and soy milk in a blender or
food processor. Serve luke warm.
An alternative recipe would be to omit the maple syrup. This would allow
the grain mash to be blended with steamed vegetables for another bal-
anced baby dinner.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup mixed: Brown Rice, millet, rolled oats,
farina, quinoa, barley or
couscous - cooked
1 Tbsp maple syrup
1 tsp flax seed oil
1 pinch sea salt (finely ground)
1/4 cup soy milk
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Baby's 'je||o'
This recipe enab|es you to create a
tasty and nutritious vegan ge|atin or
'je||o', from agar agar, a sea
vegetab|e.
Heat the water in a small sauce pan and stir in agar agar flakes. Bring this
to a boil and then reduce heat. Simmer 3 minutes and then remove from
heat.
Stir the xylitol into the agar agar water while the liquid is stir warm. Next
add the fruit juice and and place mixture in a refrigerator to chill and set
up. After 20 minutes, or when jello begins to stiffen, add the chopped
MEASURE INGREDIENT
3/4 cup water
2 Tbsps agar agar flakes
1 Tbsp xylitol
1 cup pure fruit juice
1/4 cup fruit - chopped
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fruit. Pour into a mold or leave it in the same bowl and chill 2-4 hours
before serving.
Baby's Nut-5eed Mi|k
This nutritious beverage is easy to
make and chi|dren |ove the f|avor.
Use only raw sunflower or sesame seeds, almonds, cashews. Soak seeds
in three cups water 6-8 hours. Pour off this water and rinse seeds. Add 2
cups pure water and 1 Tablespoon barley malt syrup. Blend in blender.
Strain off soy milk through a fine sieve and serve.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup seeds or nuts - raw
2 cups pure water
1 Tbsp barley malt syrup (or xylitol)
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Baby's Pudding
5imp|e f|avored pudding can be an
exce||ent dessert or snack for a
young chi|d or baby. Easi|y digestib|e
after it's pureed and cooked.
Blend all ingredients in a blender or food processor. Pour contents into a
saucepan and heat slowly on medium. Stir frequently until mixture starts
to thicken and almost boils. Remove from heat and chill for several hours
before serving.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
1 cup soy milk
2 Tbsps malt syrup (or xylitol)
2 Tbsps cornstarch
1 12-oz package silken tofu
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
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Baby's 5a|ad
Babies and sma|| chi|dren can enjoy
raw vegetab|e sa|ads, as |ong as they
are mi|d in f|avor, and we|| b|ended.
In a food processor (works better than a blender for this recipe) blend all
ingredients well and serve. Dont ever attempt to feed baby too much, a
few small bites is all that is necessary. If baby wants more ok but dont
overfeed.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups greens - raw (dont use
bitter greens or too much
raw spinach) fresh rinsed -
sprouts are ok
1 tsp virgin olive oil
1 tsp dulse seaweed - powdered
1 cucumber - seeded
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Baby's 5oy Mi|k
Fortified soy mi|k in a baby bott|e
twice a day. Once before nap again
before bedtime. 6 months and up.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
8-10 ozs fortified soy milk
1 tsp flax seed oil
1 tsp liquid baby vitamins
(!!!ONCE A DAY ONLY!!!)
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Baby's 5teamed Vegetab|es
5teaming vegetab|es render them
easy to digest, with most of the
nutrients preserved. Babies natura||y
|ove them.
Steam by putting veggies in a small sauce pan with a small amount of
water. Cover sauce pan and bring to a boil and simmer until soft. If using
a combination of vegetables, steam the harder root veggies for a few min-
utes before adding the softer veggies.
MEASURE INGREDIENT
2 cups mixed: vegetables - raw (carrots, yams, potatoes,
broccoli, cauliflower, peas, asparagus,
etc.) in any combination
(as needed) sea salt to taste (finely ground)
1/2-1 tsp flax seed oil
1/4 cup Vegetable Stock
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Place steamed vegetables in a food processor. Add a pinch of salt and
half a teaspoon of flax seed oil. Pulse processor to reduce bulk then puree
mixture while dribbling 2-4 tablespoons of vegetable stock. Finished
blend should not be too thick or too thin, adjust by adding stock to blend
slowly.
Suggested Baby
Foods
There are a number of delicious and suitable
recipes that you can feed your baby or small
child that are listed in other chapters of this-
book. Here are some possibilities that you
can choose from for quick meals or for
designing weekly menus. Some of the listed
recipes should be pureed (mashed) for small
babies.
Cold Broccoli Salad
Elbow Macaroni Salad
Hummus
Garden Pasta Salad
Mediterranean Potato Salad
Pasta Salad with Fresh Basil
Raw Food Pat
String Bean Salad
American White Bean Soup
Autumn Moon Soup
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Country Lentil Soup
Cream of Broccoli Soup
Cream of Tomato Soup
Escarole & Bean Soup
Miso Soup
Moonlight Sonata Soup
Mock Chicken Noodle Soup
MultiBean Soup
New World Lima Bean Soup
Pasta Fagioli Soup
Split Pea Soup
Vegetable Barley Soup
Vegetable Noodle Soup
Zucchini Rice Soup
Brown Gravy
Cheese Sauce
White Sauce
Marinara Sauce
Baked Cauliflower
Baked potato, Squash or Yams
Baking Powder Dumplings
Barley
Brown Rice
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Sauted Spinach
Sugar Glazed Beets or Carrots
Vegetable Medley
Polenta
Pot Pie
Shepherd's Pie
Tofu 'Tuna' Casserole
Vegan Meatloaf
Mashed Potatoes
American Stew
Gypsy's Fortune
Leonardo's Vision
Southern Comfort
Baking Powder Biscuits
Corn Bread
French Bread
Oatmeal Pancakes
Whole Wheat Bread
White Bread
Baked Custard
Crust Cookies
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Meal Planner & Themes
Introduction This is a fun chapter as it provides lists of
compatible meal combinations and accom-
paniments for multi-course dinners based
on themes such as holidays or world
regions. There are also some daily menu
examples for the individual, designed with
nutritional balance in mind. All the sug-
gested recipes can be found in this book. If
you are using the CD ROM version all titles
are red highlighted for hyperlinking to the
recipe found in this book.
In keeping with the style and format of this
book all the lists compiled here represent
compatible suggestions. There are numer-
ous possible combinations for the themes
found in this chapter, from other recipes
found in this book. Perhaps you would like
to use some of the recipes found in this
book together with some of your own
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favorite recipes to create a theme. In any
case, the suggested ideas conveyed here
should help you to structure your next ban-
quet --- or maybe just todays menu.
Themes
Christmas
Fruit & Nut Salad
German Potato Salad
Cold Broccoli Salad
French Onion Soup
Cream of Mushroom Soup
Mock Chicken Noodle Soup
Vegetable Barley Soup
Au Gratin Vegetables
Sugar Glazed Beets or Carrots
Baked Cauliflower
Candied Yams
baked squash
Mashed Potatoes
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Brown Gravy
New World Stuffed Peppers
Vegan Meatloaf
Baking Powder Biscuits
Whole Wheat Bread
Nordic Rye Bread
Ranger Cookies
Christmas Logs
Bavarian Cream Pie
Chocolate Drop Cookies
Chocolate Peanut Butter Cheesecake
Thanksgiving
Green Salad
with Creamy Ranch Dressing
Mushroom Barley Soup
Cream of Broccoli Soup
Cream of Tomato Soup
Holiday Pumpkin Soup
Candied Yams
Vegetable Medley
Baked Cauliflower
Pilaf
Mashed Potatoes
Brown Gravy
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Baked Tofu Turkey
Bread & Cornbread Stuffing
Cranberry Sauce
Pumpkin Pie
Berry Pie
Apple Pie
Miso Mincemeat Pie
Cinco De Mayo
Mexican Corn & Bean Salad
String Bean Salad
Salsa
Guacamole
Corn Bread
Corn Chowder
Jalapeno Poppers
Nachos
Mexican Quesadilla
Tofu Tamales
Grilled Mexican Fajitas
Chimichanga
Mexican Pinto Bean Soup
Beef & Bean Burrito
Beef Enchiladas
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South Pacific Feast
Fresh Fruit
with Fresh Fruit Salad Dressing
Fresh Fruit Salad
with Sunrise Seed Sauce
Thai Sweet Potato Soup
Brown Rice
Teriyaki Tempeh
Polynesian Tofu & Vegetables
Polynesian Seitan Medallions
Singapore Sunset
Gado Gado
Banana Flambe
Middle Eastern Party
Leek Salad
Mediterranean CousCous Salad
Babaganouj
Hummus
Tabouli
String Bean Salad
Falafel
Grilled Portabella Orzo Salad
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Ispanakli Borek
Mediterranean Pasta Toss
Imam's Delight
Egyptian Date Nut Candy
Himalayan Rim Dinner
Curried Root Soup
Three Bean Salad
Indian Samosas
Corn or Vegetable Fritters
Chutney
Curried Lentil Soup
Indian Vegetable Curry
Curried Enlightenment
Vegetable Kebabs with
Creamed Curry Sauce
Tantric Dumplings
Stewed Pears
Oriental Banquet
Japanese Sesame Kale/Miso
Oriental Lo Mein Salad
Chinese Cabbage Spring Roll
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Daikon Radish Soup
Miso Soup
Garlic Sesame Tofu
Oriental Stir Fry
Teriyaki Tempeh Strips
Roman Feast
Cold Broccoli Salad
Mediterranean Potato Salad
Pasta Salad with Fresh Basil
Minestrone Soup
Pasta Fagioli Soup
Portabella Orzo Soup
Penne Pasta with Pesto Sauce
Italian Sausage & Italian Meatballs
with Marinara Sauce
Tuscan Toss
Pasta Primavera
Gluten Diablo
Eggplant Parmigiani
Lasagna
Stromboli
French Bread
Dessert
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Nordic Smorgasbord
German Potato Salad
Lefsa
Nordic Rye Bread
Chicken Fried Tofu Sandwich
Swedish Meatballs
with Swedish Meatball Gravy
Baked Tofu Turkey
Neptune's Gift
Morning Coffee Cake
Apple Sauce Doughnuts
with Birch Sugar Syrup
American Sunday Picnic
Eggless Egg Salad
Garden Pasta Salad
Mock Chicken Salad
Elbow Macaroni Salad
Three Bean Salad
Raw Food Pat with crudite
Gazpacho Soup
Avocado & Hummus Sandwich
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Bacon Lettuce & Tomato Sandwich
Chicken Fried Gluten Sandwich
White Bread
Strawberry Shortcake
All American Barbecue
Roasted Red Peppers
German Potato Salad
Spinach Quesadilla
Portabella Mushroom Burger
Veggie Burger
Grilled Perfect Gluten Flank Steak
with Basic Barbecue Sauce
Grilled New York Gluten Strip
Vegetable Kebabs
Grilled Corn on the Cob
Fruit Cocktail
with Fresh Fruit Salad Dressing
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Meal Planner
1=eLc : c=- cc 1=eLc : c=- cc 1=eLc : c=- cc 1=eLc : c=- cc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST Mock Scrambled Eggs, whole wheat toast, Home
Fries, fruit juice
LUNCH Cold Broccoli Salad with Creamy Cucumber
Dressing, Avocado & Soy Cheese Sandwich,
French Fried Potatoes, Banana Cake
DINNER String Bean Salad, Vegan Meatloaf and Brown
Gravy, Mashed Potatoes, Bavarian Cream Pie
1=eLc &: c=- 1wc 1=eLc &: c=- 1wc 1=eLc &: c=- 1wc 1=eLc &: c=- 1wc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST Matzoh Cracker Pancakes, Hash Browns,
fresh fruit, maple syrup or Birch Sugar Syrup
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LUNCH Harvest Burger, American White Bean Soup,
Escarole, Whole Wheat Rolls
DINNER green salad with Euro-Asian Vinaigrette, Pilaf,
The Olympian, Triple Chocolate Cake
1=eLc : c=- 1incc 1=eLc : c=- 1incc 1=eLc : c=- 1incc 1=eLc : c=- 1incc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST fresh fruit with Sunrise Seed Sauce, Waffles with
maple syrup
LUNCH Vegetable Barley Soup, Bacon Lettuce & Tomato
Sandwich, Peanut Butter Chip Brownies
DINNER green salad with Oriental Sesame Dressing,
grilled New York Gluten Strip with A-1 sauce,
baked potato with Sour Cream, Vegetable Med-
ley, Key Lime Pie
1=eLc &: c=- 1wc 1=eLc &: c=- 1wc 1=eLc &: c=- 1wc 1=eLc &: c=- 1wc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
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1=eLc =: c=- rcLn 1=eLc =: c=- rcLn 1=eLc =: c=- rcLn 1=eLc =: c=- rcLn
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST Morning Coffee Cake, fortified soy protein shake
LUNCH Country Lentil Soup, Whole Wheat Bread, Spin-
ach Quesadilla
DINNER green salad with French Dressing, Lasagna with
Italian Meatballs and Marinara Sauce, Chocolate
Mousse
1=eLc e: c=- rivc 1=eLc e: c=- rivc 1=eLc e: c=- rivc 1=eLc e: c=- rivc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST Blueberry Pancakes with maple syrup, Home
Fries, Tempeh Bacon Strips
LUNCH Elbow Macaroni Salad, Mediterranean Potato
Salad, New World Lima Bean Soup, Tofu Burger
DINNER Hummus and Babaganouj with crudite, Ispanakli
Borek, Egyptian Date Nut Candy
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1=eLc e: c=- ei 1=eLc e: c=- ei 1=eLc e: c=- ei 1=eLc e: c=- ei
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST fresh fruit, Corn Muffins, French Toast with Birch
Sugar Syrup, Breakfast 'Sausage'
LUNCH Pizza, Artichokes Italian Style, Chocolate Drop
Cookies
DINNER green salad with Creamy Ranch Dressing, Old
World Leek Soup, Tofu 'Tuna' Casserole, Stuffed
Baked Tomatoes, Apple Pie
1=eLc : c=- ecvc 1=eLc : c=- ecvc 1=eLc : c=- ecvc 1=eLc : c=- ecvc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
BREAKFAST Potato Pancakes, apple sauce, Sour Cream,
vegan-style canadian bacon,
fresh squeezed orange and grapefruit juice
LUNCH green salad with Bulgar Wheat and Tahini Vinai-
grette, Sonoran Black Bean Soup, Whoopie Wrap
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DINNER Coleslaw, Hot Cross Buns, Chicken Fried Gluten
Cutlets with Mashed Potatoes and Brown Gravy,
Baked Beans, Sauted Spinach, Chocolate Pea-
nut Butter Cheesecake
1=eLc : c=- ecvc 1=eLc : c=- ecvc 1=eLc : c=- ecvc 1=eLc : c=- ecvc
TIME OF DAY SUGGESTED RECIPES
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Glossary
Introduction If youre new to cooking and vegan cuisine,
you should take the time to read this sec-
tion in its entirety. The following has been
included to assist the reader in developing
their knowledge-base in Vegan cuisine. It
is alphabetically ordered and is also the
destination of many of the hyperlinked ref-
erences throughout the electronic version
of this publication.
This glossary is an extremely important sec-
tion to the Vegan Cookbook. Not only
does it serve to assist the reader in under-
standing materials and terms used
throughout this book, it can direct the
reader to a number of product distributors
in the Resource Directory. If youre using
the CD-ROM version, simply click on the
shopping cart icon associated with a sub-
ject in the glossary. A list of related busi-
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ness addresses, telephone numbers and
Internet web site addresses are included to
assist the reader with the acquisition of
recommended food products.
agar agar A translucent sea vegetable; when dried
and reconstituted, is a vegan substitute for
animal-based gelatin.
allspice The whole or ground, dried berry of the
pimento tree native to Jamaica. So
named because its flavor resembles the
combined flavors of many spices. Use in
cakes and pies, desserts, Middle Eastern
and Island cuisine such as stews, soups
and sauces. Allspice is a global spice and
is included in fusion cuisine throughout the
world today.
almond The nut of the sweet almond tree. The
almond is used in a full range of cooking
applications from sauts to dessert and
candy. Almond milk is very nutritious.
Almonds originally grew in western Asia
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but today they grow in the coastal regions
of the Mediterranean. Almonds are a
member of the rose family of plants.
anise The whole or ground seed of the anise
plant native to Egypt and the Mediterra-
nean. Today, anise is cultivated in Ger-
many and other countries and is used for
flavoring in licorice, cookies and candy.
The star shaped seed is also used in Asia
for soups and stir-fry. Often mixed with
other spices such as the commercially mar-
keted Five Spice Powder.
arrowroot A starchy powder from the root of a tropi-
cal plant. It is usually less processed than
cornstarch and is a one to one replace-
ment, i.e. 1 tsp. cornstarch = 1 tsp. arrow-
root
artichoke A thistle like garden vegetable whose
starchy edible parts are the heart and inner
leaves. Usually served baked and stuffed,
or steamed with a dipping sauce.
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asafetida Available from Indian food markets, asa-
fetida is a pungent, concentrated flavoring
produced from the resin of a species of
fennel. Substitute for onions and garlic.
au gratin Baked dishes covered with breadcrumbs
and melted cheese or cheese sauce.
avocado A fruit of the tropics distinguished by its
high unsaturated fat content and nutty fla-
vor, like the tomato it combines well with
raw fruits or vegetables. High in B vitamins
and minerals.
bake To cook something in an oven, without
basting.
balsamic vinegar A sweet Italian vinegar made from white
Tribiano grapes aged in wooden barrels.
Distinctive flavor, used in raw vegetable
salads and sauces.
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banana Fruit grown in the tropics, through inten-
sive cultivation has become a worldwide
crop. Sweet bananas are usually eaten raw
and contain high amounts of potassium
and vitamins A, B and C.
barbecuing to roast or grill food on skewers or grate
while basting with a spice sauce over an
open flame.
barley Barley was one of the first grains cultivated
be man. Originating some 11,000 years
ago and cultivated in Asia and the Middle
East by 5000 BC, barley has been a staple
grain of Western Civilization. Used pre-
dominantly in soups, stews, brewing, cere-
als and making malt syrup.
barley malt syrup A sweet syrup made by malting barley.
Less sweet than honey, a more complex
carbohydrate.
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basil Common or sweet basil, native to Europe
and America is used to flavor soups,
sauces, casseroles, stews and sauts. Used
predominantly in Italian cuisine.
basmati rice Long grain brown or white rice from India
and Asia that has been aged to create an
aromatic flavor.
baste to pour hot, flavored liquid over roasting
or broiling foods.
bay leaves Whole leaves from the Mediterranean or
the coasts of North America used to flavor
soups and stews. From the bay tree.
bean sprouts Usually mung beans are used but soy, len-
til, black or any other bean or seed will
work. The dried bean is first soaked for 6
to 12 hours. Beans are then drained well
and placed in a transparent container. This
container is then exposed to sunlight for up
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to 3 days. Beans are rinsed several times a
day to prevent spoilage. When tiny leaves
appear and start to turn green, remove
sprouts from sunlight, place in cold water
and refrigerate. Sprouting converts
starches to sugars and sprouts are rich in
enzymes.
beans Beans or legumes are one of the most
important farmed products in the vegeta-
ble kingdom. Not only are beans excellent
sources of protein, but they fix nitrogen
from the air and help to fertilize the
ground. The soybean is the source for tofu,
tempeh and textured soy products. Beans
vary in starch and protein content. Some
beans such as kidney are high in protein
while others such as garbanzo are high in
starch. Every region of the world has its
indigenous varieties or bean. Mung and
red beans from the orient, pinto and kid-
neys from the Americas. Fresh, undried
beans that are eaten raw or cooked
include string and wax beans.
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black pepper Aromatic and pungent dried berry of the
peppercorn plant, native to India and
Southeast Asia. Milled or ground black
pepper is used to enhance flavor in foods.
It is combined in small amounts with other
herbs and spices to flavor foods around the
world. From the middle ages to the
present time it remains one of the worlds
most sought after spices. Almost always
used with salted, other than sweetened
foods. Whole peppercorns are used in con-
sumes and for pickling. Black pepper has
medicinal value by increasing blood circu-
lation and improving digestion.
blanch To dip into boiling water for a short dura-
tion. Purposes are to loosen skin of vege-
tables such as tomatoes for peeling, or to
whiten or brighten vegetables or to sterilize
for freezing or canning.
boil To heat liquids to 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Used in cooking to render starchy vegeta-
bles, beans and grains edible. Boiling liq-
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uid also blanches, sterilizes and creates
steam for steaming.
bok choy Member of the cabbage family grown
extensively in the Orient and is used in
many preparations, from soups to stir-fries.
Braggs Liquid Ami-
nos
A soy sauce substitute made wheat free
with soy amino acids.
braising Braising is the process of searing foods
with a small amount of oil and then allow-
ing food to simmer, covered, in its own
juices or small amount of liquid.
broccoli Originating in southern Europe and Italy,
broccoli has become a staple vegetable of
North America and can be found in most of
the worlds cuisine today. Related to cauli-
flower. The flowering buds and stalks
make up the whole plant. Used in hot and
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cold dishes. Requires light to medium
cooking or steaming. Contains chloro-
phyll, Vitamins A, B, C and cancer-fighting
compounds.
broth The liquid in soup, stock or consomms.
brown rice Natural, unpearled whole grain complete
with bran, starch and endosperm. Brown
rice is a balanced food with substantial
amounts of protein, carbohydrates and B
vitamins. With origins is Asia and India,
rice arrived in Greece and the Mediterra-
nean region by 300 BC. Cultivated in
Spain by the Moors in the eighth century, it
was introduced to Europe and the Ameri-
cas by Spanish explorers in the 1500s.
[see Brown Rice recipe]
brown rice syrup Somewhat like dark honey but less sweet,
it has a full flavor and can be used as a
substitute for honey, corn syrup, or maple
syrup.
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bulgar wheat Cracked dried wheat berries, boiled and
used in salads, pilafs, stews and various
Middle Eastern cuisine.
butternut squash Large, tough skinned yellow squash yield-
ing a delicious starchy meat when baked.
cajun spice blend A spice combination used to blacken
foods in Cajun cuisine consisting of chilies,
black pepper, cayenne, onion and garlic
powders. Use in small quantities as a fla-
vor enhancer, in larger amounts to
increase heat.
canap A blended or creamed food that is served
on crackers.
cantilini beans White kidney beans.
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canola oil A mono and poly unsaturated fat - cold
pressed oil.
capers A pickled bud of the caper bush that grows
in Europe and North America. Use in sal-
ads, sauces and sauted pasta tosses.
caraway The seeds and leaves are used to flavor
soups, salads and stews. The seeds give rye
bread its distinctive flavor.
cardamom The fruit of a plant from India, is usually
ground and used as a spice. The plant is
quite large reaching a height of 15 feet
and belongs to the ginger family. Carda-
mom has a distinct, aromatic flavor and is
used in curries and spice mixes in both
salty and sweet foods.
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carob The ground bean of the St. Johns Bread
tree. Used in baking as a flour, as well as a
chocolate substitute. Tamarind is the pulpy
sweet flesh of the bean. Native to Southern
Asia, the tree is so named because it was
supposed to have nourished John the Bap-
tist while he was in the wilderness.
carrot Common root vegetable eaten raw or
cooked, can be found in almost every cul-
ture and in every type of cuisine. Belonging
to the parsley family, carrots are and
important source of carotene, B vitamins
vitamin A and C. Carrots are very health
giving and are frequently used as a base
for vegetable juice.
casserole A baked tray of food bound together with
cheese or sauce that serves several people.
cauliflower White flowering bud garden vegetable
belonging to the mustard family and
closely related to broccoli. Found world
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wide it is usually cooked but can be eaten
raw. Large amounts of Vitamin C, sulfur,
vitamin A and phosphorus.
cayenne Hot red pepper used to spice foods. Very
hot, high frequency spice. Contains cap-
sium, a medicinal compound.
[See Hot Pepper Chart]
celery Belonging to the parsley and the turnip
families, celery is used to flavor soups,
stocks, and stews. The stalk and leaves are
used for cooking, the seeds for spice.
chapati A flat, unleavened bread from India.
chickpeas Also known as garbanzo beans, this
starchy bean, an important crop in the
Middle East and Northern Africa, it is used
in such preparations as falafel and hum-
mus.
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chili A slang word describing a soup made with
beans, vegetables and meat.
[see Vegan Meats chapter]
chili peppers Various kinds of hot peppers each with dif-
ferent flavors, grown in Mexico. chili in
Spanish means red pepper. [See Hot
Pepper Chart]
chili powder A blend of cumin and mild to medium chili
peppers.
[See Hot Pepper Chart]
chlorophyll A complex carbohydrate created by plants
from sunlight in a process called photosyn-
thesis. This process includes water and
carbon dioxide and produces oxygen as a
byproduct. This is the green in green vege-
tables. High levels of chlorophyll in your
diet are essential for good health.
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chocolate A dark, bitter resin from the seeds of the
tropical cacao tree, which is processed into
hard cakes with more of the cocoa butter
than cocoa. Chocolate is a natural stimu-
lant and is high in energy producing com-
plex carbohydrates. Chocolate is usually
considered a dessert ingredient but can be
used in some salty dishes as well adding
distinctive flavor.
cilantro Green leaves of the coriander plant. Adds
a fresh aromatic flavor to Asian and Mexi-
can cuisine. Sometimes called Chinese
parsley.
cinnamon Aromatic spice used worldwide in candies,
cookies, cakes, pies, soups, sauces,
etc...Grown in the tropics, from the bark of
the cinnamon laurel tree.
clove The flower buds of the clove tree, and
evergreen native to the Moluccas Islands.
Used in curries and spice combinations in
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vegan cuisine. Strong aromatic and pun-
gent flavor. The oil of clove is used as a
medicine.
cocoa Made from the cacao bean in the same
process as chocolate, except with less of
the cocoa butter. Cocoa is usually ground
into a powder and used in beverages and
baking.
coconut The fruit of the coconut palm, probably the
most important plant in the tropics. The
tree, and fruit are used for everything from
food to shelter and clothing. Dried shred-
ded coconut is used in desserts throughout
the world, coconut milk is used in cooking
soups, sauces, sauts, and stews. The oil
from the coconut is used in cooking as well
as cosmetics. Hearts of palm are the ten-
der young shoots and are used in salads.
consomm In vegan cuisine, a clear vegetable broth.
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coriander An annual herb native to the Mediterra-
nean. Leaves are cilantro. The ground
seeds are called coriander and are used as
spice in cooking throughout the Middle
East and Central Asia. In Europe and
America, coriander is used in cookies and
candies.
corn Probably the most valuable crop in the
Americas, corn is eaten in a variety of
ways. From soups to succotash, from oil to
syrup. Cornstarch, popcorn, tamales and
cornbread. Other products include glues,
soaps, solvents, explosives, ether and ethyl
alcohol. First discovered by the Western
World in the 15th century, it has been culti-
vated in the Americas for over 10,000
years. Corn is a grain, and belongs to the
Gramineae family of grasses. The nutri-
tional value of corn comes in way of com-
plex carbohydrates and sugars for energy
for the most part and to a lesser degree,
protein, vitamins and roughage.
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corn oil Oil derived from corn. Used for salad
dressings, frying, and other forms cooking
and baking.
corn syrup Syrup made from the sugars in corn.
cornstarch Pure starch derived from corn. Used in
cooking to thicken sources, soups, stews,
pies, sauts and casseroles.
couscous A granular semolina pasta made from
steaming, drying and cracking durham
wheat. Used extensively in North African
and Middle Eastern cuisines. Uses include
salads, sauts and as pie crust.
cracker A wheat or grain flatbread that is baked
crisp and served as snacks, or with canap.
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cream, to Creaming is the process of beating with a
whisk or electric mixer, a food mixture
which is, at least in part, liquid. A second-
ary meaning is: to thicken with white
sauce.
croutons Toasted bread cubes, often seasoned.
crudite Crudite, pronounced cru-di-tay, is a French
word for sliced, finger sized raw vegetables
intended for dipping into sauces.
cucumber Native to Southern Asia the cucumber is a
staple of the raw vegetable salad of Amer-
ica. Cucumbers are a member of the
gourd family. Usually eaten raw, cucum-
bers are good blood cleansers and alkalin-
izers. Preserved cucumbers in brine are
called pickles
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cumin Spice used extensively throughout the
world with emphasis on Mexican and Mid-
dle Eastern cuisine.
curry paste A blend of dried spices and fresh herbs.
curry powder A blend of dry herbs and aromatic spices.
Used in Indian and Asian cooking. Very
distinct flavor for soups, sauts, stews and
sauces. Flavor and spice heat is adjustable
by adding or subtracting spices. Best cur-
ries include fenugreek as a main ingredi-
ent.
custard In vegan cuisine, a custard is a thickened
sweet pudding made with tofu, sweeteners,
binders, soy milk and flavorings. Used in
pies, cakes and puddings.
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dandelion Tender young leaves from the common
weed are edible (providing that they grow
in ground untreated with chemicals).
dates Very sweet, dried fruit of the date palm
tree, found in the Southern Mediterranean
region including North Africa. Date sugar
is a very potent sweetener.
deep frying To immerse food into oil at a temperature
of around 350 degrees.
defrost To thaw out frozen foods
deglaze To loosen and wash out the pan juices and
flavoring with wine, stock or water, while
sauting.
dijon mustard A prepared mustard condiment made with
spicy brown mustard seeds, white wine and
vinegar as main ingredients.
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dill Both the leaf and the seed are used. The
leaves are used fresh or dried in salads as
well as some Turkish and eastern European
cooked dishes. The seeds are used in sal-
ads, potatoes and vinegar.
dredge To coat with flour, generally before frying.
dumplings usually consisting of flour and potatoes or
flavorings, dumplings are light pastries
slow cooked on the tops of soups and
stews.
edamame Frozen immature soy beans that can be
steamed and eaten.
eggplant The large, black skinned fruit produced by
the garden bush belonging to the night-
shade family. Also called Aubergine, it is
native to northern India but spread to the
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rest of the world thousands of years ago.
Used extensively in Italian and Mediterra-
nean cuisine. In Macrobiotic cuisine, egg-
plants are considered extremely Yin.
endive A leafy vegetable closely related to chicory.
Sharp flavor, eaten raw in salads. Belongs
to same family as escarole. High in vita-
mins A, B, and C and calcium. French
endive is grown in low sunlight producing
a light green, tight leafed plant used in
cooking.
escarole A leafy green vegetable whose tough
leaves require cooking to tenderize. Esca-
role has a delicious flavor with lots of vita-
mins and minerals.
fennel A celery like plant that has the flavor of
anise. Use sparingly in place of celery in
cooking. The Italian fenocchio - or bulbous
white stalk - is the edible portion or the
plant.
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fenugreek A plant native to Europe and Asia whose
seeds are used in curry powders and
medicinal teas.
figs A fresh or dried sweet fruit from a tree
native to Asia and the Middle East, but
grown in all sub-tropical climates today.
file powder A Creole spice mix consisting of dried and
powdered sassafras leaves, powdered
dried okra, coriander, allspice and sage.
Used to thicken stews or gumbos.
fillet A thin slice of food.
flax seed oil Cold pressed oil from the Flax plant. One
of the oldest cultivated plants used by man
for making linen and paper products. Flax
seed oil contains essential omega 3 and 6
fatty acids.
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fold, to To gently mix foods without disturbing the
air bubbles in the concoction. This is done
by placing the lighter ingredient atop of the
heavier ingredient and lifting the heavier
material from the bottom of the bowl over
the top of the lighter material until the
foods are well mixed. An example is muf-
fin making.
fricassee To braise vegetables and vegetable meats
then cook slowly in stock, gravy or sauce.
fritter A fried cake with corn or vegetables made
from a stiff batter.
fructose The sugar in fruit.
garlic One of the great, universal flavor enhanc-
ing plant foods, garlic is used in various
degrees in cuisine throughout the world.
The clove of bulb is used chopped, sliced or
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crushed. Garlic is also well respected for
its medicinal value.
ginger A spice from the root of a kind of lily,
native to Southeast Asia, now grown in
Jamaica, South America, Japan and else-
where. Used in Asian and Oriental cui-
sines as well as Island cuisine of the
Caribbean and in the South Pacific. Ginger
that is candied is popular in the Orient.
glaze A glaze is a thickened, flavored or spiced
sauce that is applied (brushed) over cook-
ing foods (i.e. open grill barbecuing).
glucose The sugar from starch produced by plants.
gluten Isolated gluten is used to make vegan
meats such as steaks, seitan, and is also
mixed with other vegetable-based food
stuffs, to simulate animal meats, such as
ham or turkey.
[see Vegan Meats chapter]
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goulash A heavily spiced Hungarian stew flavored
with paprika.
gramineae The family of grasses that include all the
worlds great grains such as wheat, barley,
rice, corn and rye. This family of grasses,
and their emergence on the scene about
11,000 years ago marked the beginning of
agriculture and civilization.
grapefruit Citrus fruit, very juicy, slightly bittersweet.
gravy A sauce made with a rue of flour and oil
and usually a flavored stock as a liquid.
grits Boiled white corn hominy.
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guacamole A Mexican avocado dip.
gumbo A Cajun or Creole soup, thickened with
file powder.
habenero Some of the hottest peppers in the world,
grown in Mexico. Grown in Jamaica it is
called Scotch Bonnet. To understand how
hot: if a bell pepper is zero heat units, the
dried Habenero can be as high as 200,000
heat units.
[See Hot Pepper Chart]
hazelnut Hard shelled small nut also called a Filbert.
hoisin paste A Chinese soybean paste flavored with
chilies, garlic and spices. Use in small
quantities to flavor sauces and stir frys, dis-
tinctive flavor.
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hominy Corn kernels whose husk and germ have
been removed. This process is traditionally
accomplished by soaking corn in slated
lime. Grits are the broken up hominy.
honey A thick liquid sweetener produced by the
action of enzymes of the honeybees stom-
ach on flower pollen ingested by the bee.
The bee regurgitates the honey. Since bee-
keeping is essential for the pollination of
plants, the symbiotic relationship between
humans and bees has improved our con-
trol of food production in the environment.
Although not a direct product of the bee,
some vegans find honey unacceptable as a
food product.
hors doeuvres Hors doeuvres are small, prepared finger
foods that are served with drinks. Unlike
the Canap, which sit on top of a cracker,
hors doeuvres are stand alone concoctions
that can be eaten with a cracker.
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horseradish A bitter, pungent root made into a mus-
tard-like condiment.
jalapeno A medium hot Mexican pepper.
[See Hot Pepper Chart]
jerk sauce A Jamaican spice sauce or glaze made with
molasses, as a base.
kale A leafy green vegetable high in vitamins A
and C as well as chlorophyll, enzymes, cal-
cium and magnesium.
kasha Cooked buckwheat groats.
kebab A skewer of food usually intend for grilling
or broiling.
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ketchup A generic, slang name for a popular spiced
tomato condiment. Its been theorized that
the use of ketchup at dinner time, led to
the pronunciation as catsup.
knead To massage or work a dough in order to
activate its gluten formation.
lavender The flowers are dried and used for season-
ing, adding an aromatic, pungent and per-
fume like flavor to foods.
leeks Related to the onion in family and flavor,
the leek is prized as a soup vegetable.
legumes Dried beans.
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lemon Sour citrus fruit used in all forms aspects of
cooking. Native to Southeast Asia.
lemon grass Grass native to the tropics noted for its
lemony taste and odor. Lemon grass is
steeped in soups and sauces in Thai and
Southeast Asian cuisine.
lentil Belonging to the pea family, the lentil is
one of the oldest known legumes. Native
to Egypt and Asia. Usually used in soups,
lentils are high in protein.
lettuce Native to Middle East, lettuce has been cul-
tivated for several thousand years and
today is the most popular raw salad food in
the world. Lettuce belongs to the compos-
ite family. The greener the leaf, the more
nutritious the lettuce.
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lima beans Native to North America, this bean is the
most nutritious member of the pea family.
Use dried beans in soups, fresh in stews.
lime Limes are closely related to lemons. A sour,
citrus fruit with a skin and shape similar to
lemons but green. Origins are from India.
Liquid Smoke Bottled hickory smoke flavoring (vegan).
macaroni Another word for pasta, usually associated
with small noodles such as elbows.
mace The dried, ground outer fruit of the Myris-
tica Fragans. The same fruit produces nut-
meg, and mace is a milder version of the
same flavor.
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mango Tropical fruit noted for its sweet orange col-
ored flesh under a tough outer skin. High
in vitamin C.
marinate To soak in a flavored liquid for a period of
time so as to impart the same flavor to the
food, which is then cooked.
marjoram A mild herb, excellent in soups, sauts and
salad dressings. Marjoram is a member of
the mint family.
masa harina Mexican corn flour used in making tortillas.
Made from dried and ground, lime soaked
hominy.
mash To crush a food such as boiled potatoes
until it is smoothed and beaten, but not
whipped.
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matzoh meal From ground, unleavened matzoh crack-
ers. Used to thicken soups and dredge
foods.
meat The protein of a life form. Vegan meat is
a first-source food, and designates a TVP,
tofu, tempeh, seitan or gluten food prod-
uct. These products are derived from vege-
table, grain and nut protein combinations.
[see Vegan Meats chapter]
mesclum mix An assortment of fresh field greens such as
sorrel, radicchio, dandelion, frisee, aru-
gala, oak leaf, mache and mizuma used in
raw salads.
millet Small, granular grain with a yellow color
grown as a staple in Eastern Asia. Cooks
quickly and easily. Millet is high in alkaline
minerals.
mince, to To chop even finer than dicing.
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mint Many varieties of this herb grow world-
wide. Uses include raw and prepared sal-
ads and Middle Eastern dishes. Mint is
used in many products from candy and
breath fresheners to herbal teas. A variety
of herbs come from the mint family of
plants.
miso paste A fermented soy bean paste that comes
from the Far East, used to flavor soups and
sauces. Varieties range from light to dark.
Dark miso is stronger and saltier.
molasses The thick syrup produced by boiling the
sugar cane. Molasses is the product of the
first step in making sugar. Used in desserts
and sauces.
mole Mexican paste or sauce made with chilies,
tomato, spices and chocolate.
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mung bean An oriental bean usually grown into bean
sprouts. Also ground into four to make
noodles in the Orient.
mustard The dry powder, or seed, used in prepara-
tions of vinegar and wine to make pre-
pared pastes. The French Dijon variety or
Louisiana mix is milder that the hot Jamai-
can or sharp yellow English varieties. Mus-
tard powder is also used in salad dressings,
soups and sauts.
mustard greens Excellent nutrition and flavor when prop-
erly cooked. Tough leaves cant be eaten
raw. Old fashioned Southern cuisine is
fond of these greens.
nappa Chinese cabbage.
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nutmeg Ground spice, made from a - fragrant -
hard seed of an East India tree.
nutritional yeast Similar to Brewers Yeast but better fla-
vored. Lends a distinctive cheesy, nutty fla-
vor as a seasoning. High in essential
aminos and B vitamins.
oats Oats are a very nutritious cereal grain that
is used as a breakfast cereal and for bak-
ing. Oats belong to the same family of
grasses as do wheat, barley, corn, rye and
rice, the family gramineae. Although a
wild ancient grain, oats were not widely
cultivated by until the Middle Ages. The
cereal is referred to as rolled oats or oat-
meal.
olive First grown in the Eastern Mediterranean
region, the olive soon grew wild through-
out the Middle East, Italy, Greece, Spain
and Northern Africa where it has become a
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staple since ancient times. Prized for its oil,
the olive is also canned in brine or pickled
in vinegar.
olive oil An excellent cooking or salad oil. Olive oil
is pressed out of fresh olives and is a good
source of mono-unsaturated fat. It con-
geals if refrigerated.
onion Native to Central Asia, onions were
brought to America by its earliest settlers.
Strong, pungent flavor marks the use of the
onion in cooking. The natural compounds
in onions have medical value. Onions are
also eaten raw and powdered for use as a
flavoring agent.
orange Citrus fruit of the tropics its sweet orange
juice is served as a beverage all over the
world. Rich in vitamin C and antioxidants,
the orange is also used in soups, sauces
and desserts.
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oregano Mild herb with a distinctive flavor used in
Italian and Mexican cuisine. Belonging to
the mint family.
orzo Small, seed like pasta used for soups and
salads.
oyster mushroom White, fan shaped mushroom with a pep-
pery flavor.
papaya A tropical fruit that is sweet and fleshy cov-
ered by a thick. tough skin. Besides being
good sources of vitamin C and biofla-
vanoids, Papaya contains an enzyme called
papain that digests protein. In the South
Pacific, Papaya is eaten before a protein
meal.
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paprika A mild bright red pepper that has been
dried and ground into a powder. The fla-
vor of paprika is distinctive and is used in
Spanish and Eastern European Cooking.
parsley Native to Southern Italy, the mild flavored
green is treated more as an herb than as a
vegetable although its nutritional value is
quite high. Parsley is a good source of vita-
mins A and C and minerals such as Iron.
parsnip A hearty root vegetable related to the car-
rot and dill. Parsnips are shaped like car-
rots but yellowish white in color. A starchy
vegetable that requires cooking, it is high
in calories, vitamins A and C. Parsnips are
native to Europe.
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peanuts Native to South America, early colonialists
grew peanuts in America. An excellent
source of protein peanut butter is has more
protein and energy giving calories than
beef. Peanuts have hundreds of industrial
and commercial uses. Peanuts are a type
of pea that grows in a pod underground.
Peanuts are grown in South East Asia and
are an important part of their cuisine.
pears Originally from southern Europe, Asia and
China, pears are grown extensively in the
United States. Pears are grown on trees in
orchards. They are high in Vitamins and
minerals. Pears can be eaten raw or
stewed.
peas Edible round-shaped seeds from long
green pods, which grow from a climbing
vine-like plant.
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pepper Family of vegetable fruits belonging to the
Nightshades and ranging from sweet to
hot in flavor. Heat spice in foods is usually
created and controlled with peppers.
Sweet bell peppers are an excellent source
of vitamin C.
pickle Usually refers to cucumbers that have been
pickled, or preserved in brine and or vine-
gar.
pine nuts Pine nuts (or pignoli nuts) are really the
seeds of the pinon pine of the Southwest-
ern United States. A staple food of West-
ern Indian tribes; they are high energy
foods with good protein content.
pinto beans Mexican red beans used in refried beans.
Staple of Mexico, high in protein and B
vitamins.
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poach, to Poaching a food such as dumplings, is to
float the food on top of a boiling or sim-
mering liquid, while basting the top of the
food with the same liquid.
poblano chili Medium hot, long and fairly wide, used to
stuff rellenos.
polenta Polenta is a cornmeal mash that can be
spread and cooled, then used as a pizza
crust or cut into pieces and grilled. Polenta
is a staple food of Northern Italy.
pomegranate An ancient fruit that once grew wild on
bushes in western Asia and India. A tough,
leathery red skin covers a seed laden, juicy
interior. A refreshing taste similar to
sweetened cranberry.
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portabella
mushroom
Large capped Italian Mushroom whose fla-
vor when grilled, is noted for its similarity
to beef steak. Very versatile, great tasting
grilled, or in sauts or soups.
potato A tuber, the potato is grown all over the
modern world. An important source of
energy, the potato is surprisingly low in cal-
ories. Potatoes are a good source of B vita-
mins and minerals. A great cold weather
vegetable, potatoes were first grown in the
Andes Mountains of Peru and Bolivia.
Spanish explorers introduced the potato to
Europe c.1550.
puff pastry A commercially prepared pastry dough,
made with multi-layered oiled dough.
When baked, produces a puffed layered
textured bread that can be stuffed.
pumpkin Pumpkins are large orange, edible gourds
native to North America and American
Cuisine. Usually recognized for their use
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as carved Jack O Lanterns on Halloween.
Pumpkin pie is a traditional Thanksgiving
dessert.
quinoa Pronounced keen-wah. This ancient grain
was the only grain that could grow in the
high Andes mountains and served as a sta-
ple for the Incas. High in protein and B
vitamins, a very fine grain rediscovered
only recently by the modern world.
Quinoa grains are naturally coated with
saponin, a resin that acts as an insect
repellant, and must be rinsed well before
cooking to remove its bitter flavor.
radish A pungent garden vegetable that is usually
eaten in salads but can also be found pick-
led. White radishes make good soup vege-
tables.
ragout A highly seasoned stew.
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raisin Raisins are sun dried grapes. Black raisins
are from red grapes and yellow raisins are
from white grapes. Raisins are a good
source of minerals such as iron and copper
as well as vitamins A and G and are con-
sidered blood builders. They alkalinize the
blood.
raspberry Raspberries are little red or black berries
that grow on thorny bushes in North
America. Excellent in pies or torts, also
eaten raw or the juice extracted. Raspber-
ries belong to the rose family.
ravioli An Italian dough pocket, stuffed with
cheese and just about anything. Raviolis
are usually boiled and served with a sauce.
rice The Staff of Life for most Asians, rice is a
versatile, almost perfectly balanced grain
that is grown in rice patties or shallow
water lakes. Rice was first grown in Asia
and India thousands of years ago and first
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introduced to the West by Alexander the
Great in 326 BC. Brought by the Moors to
Spain in the eighth century AD, the Span-
iards first cultivated rice in South America
in the 1600s. Brown rice, or unmilled rice
contains a balanced mix of starch, protein
and B vitamins as well as minerals. Rice is
a member of the grass family gramineae.
rice syrup A complex carbohydrate sweetener derived
from brown rice and sprouted barley.
risotto Risotto, or Italian rice, is really is a rice
shaped pasta used in soups, casserole or
sauts.
roast, to Roasting is to cook or bake a food prepara-
tion or whole food in an oven, basting with
seasoned liquid frequently.
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romaine lettuce A type of lettuce plant whose edible salad
leaves are popular in raw green salads.
Romaine is much more nutritious than Ice-
berg Lettuce.
rosemary Rosemary is the leaf of an evergreen shrub
native to the Mediterranean region. Rose-
mary belongs to the mint family and is
used in cooking as an herb in stews, sau-
ts, broiled and grilled foods. Use fresh or
dry.
roulade In Vegan cuisine a roulade is a shank of
gluten steak stuffed with vegetables, rolled
up and sauted. Alternatives to the gluten
flank steak would be bean curd wrap, nut
and bean mash or just about anything that
will work such as wide noodles.
rue A rue is a lightly fried mixture of wheat
flour and oil. Seasoning may be added to
the rue. The rue then becomes the base
for thickened gravies and sauces.
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rye Another ancient grain belonging to the
Gramineae family of grasses. Rye is an
important grain used in breadmaking.
saffron The dried stigmas of the purple autumn
crocus, saffron is a yellow food dye used in
Indian cooking.
sage Sage is a small bush herb and member of
the mint family. Sage is used sparingly in
soups and stews for its mildly aromatic fla-
vor, especially in American cuisine.
saut, to Pan cooking a group of mixed foods
together, through the stages of pan frying
or searing, to steaming and finally simmer-
ing with a sauce.
savory A mild annual herb used in soups and sal-
ads.
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scald, to To heat moist food up to a temperature of
185 degrees Fahrenheit without ever boil-
ing.
searing Searing foods is the act of browning the
sides of the food in a medium hot pan of
light oil. This is done to seal in the flavor
and to preserve food shape.
seitan A wheat gluten based veggie meat, high
in protein. Seitan is usually a mixture of
wheat flour and gluten flour. Seitan has
been consumed in the Orient for thou-
sands of years.
[see Vegan Meats chapter]
semolina flour Semolina flour is a cream colored wheat
flour used to make pastas. Its high gluten
content keep pasta from falling apart.
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sesame seeds The seeds from an annual plant grown in
the tropics. These seeds are prized for their
distinctive, nutty flavored oil used in cook-
ing as well as the seed as a food stuff. In
the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean
region these seeds are ground into a butter
and used to make Tahini.
shortening Vegetable Shortening is vegetable oil that
has been hydrogenated, a process which
transforms the free fatty acids by binding
them with hydrogen. This partially solidi-
fies the oil making it more useful in baking.
simmer, to Simmering is to cook moist foods at a tem-
perature of between 130 and 185 degrees
Fahrenheit. Simmering usually occurs after
the food is brought to a boil.
soy beans Soy beans are the source of a great many
food and industrial products. Green picked
soy beans are a delicacy steamed, tofu
and tofu products come from soy beans,
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textured and isolated soy bean proteins
are used to create meat analogs, delicious
and nutritious soy milk is made from soy
beans, soy flour for baking and soy oil
excellent for cooking, also come from the
soy bean. Many industrial products such as
glues, pharmaceutical drugs, paints, fer-
tilizer, insect repellants and pet food are
also created from the soy bean plant.
Belonging to the Pea family of plants, soy
beans originally grew wild in eastern Asia
and have been cultivated by the Chinese
for thousands of years. Since antiquity, the
Chinese have considered the soybean to
be their most important crop. In the 17th
century soy beans were tried as crops in
Europe and England but never reached
large scale production. In 1804 the soy-
bean was introduced to the United States,
which now is the worlds largest producer
of soybeans. [see Vegan Meats chapter]
spinach A green garden vegetable that is con-
sumed cooked or raw. Spinach is high in
vitamins A, B and C. Native to southwest
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Asia it has been cultivated in Europe since
the 16th century AD. Spinach was grown
in gardens by the first American settlers.
Spinach is a member of the Goosefoot
family of plants.
squash Belonging to the gourd family of vine
plants, squashes come in a wide variety.
There are three main categories of squash:
summer squashes, autumn squashes and
winter squashes. Summer squashes can be
steamed, stewed or sauted with edible
skins while autumn and winter varieties
have tough skins and should be baked.
Autumn and winter squashes are starchy
vegetables with tuber like properties.
steam, to Steaming is the cooking process whereby
foods cooked entirely by steam heat from a
source of boiling liquid located beneath the
food. Steaming retains most of the vita-
mins and enzymes that may be destroyed
in other cooking processes.
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steep To steep is to allow a tea or food to soak in
hot water.
stew A slow cooked food mixture with less liquid
than a soup and thickened with starch.
stock In Vegan cuisine, stock is a liquid flavoring
agent. Stock is made by cooking down a
large volume of vegetable matter in water
and then straining off the broth for use as
stock.
[see Vegetable Stock recipe]
string beans Garden vegetable, pole or bush variety,
with edible pod and seeds. Eaten raw or
lightly cooked. Also called green beans,
they are related to wax beans.
stuffing A moist, baked mixture of vegetables,
breads and or grains.
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sucanat An acronym for Sugar Cane Natural, which
is an excellent substitute for honey or cane
sugar.
sucrose Sucrose is the simplest form of carbohy-
drate. Obtained from plants, especially the
sugar cane and sugar beet, sucrose is the
energy created for plants by plants,
through photosynthesis.
sugar The worlds most popular food sweetener,
sugar, is the crystallized sucrose of the
sugar cane plant. Sugar is made by mill-
ing, baking, boiling, filtering and refiltering
the cane until all the molasses syrup is
removed. Sugar is marketed in various
forms such as white sugar, raw sugar,
evaporated cane juice, dark to light brown
sugar and molasses. Sugar cane is native
to India and cultivated in Europe by the
end of the first millennium. Columbus
brought cuttings to the West Indies and
Cortez established plantations in Mexico.
From this beginning sugar spread through-
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out the southern hemisphere. Products
other than sugar cane described as sugar
include beet sugar, fruit sugar or fructose
and maple sugar.
sweet potato A tropical climbing plant, with thick edible
roots (tubers), whose meat can be yellow,
red, or white in appearance, and very
sweet to the taste. Though not the same in
taste or size, the sweet potato is commonly
referred to as a yam.
tahini A butter made from ground sesame seeds.
Tahini sauce is a light blend of tahini butter
lemon, water and salt.
tamale Corn husks, banana or tea leaves used to
encase a spiced, mashed stuffing that is
slow steamed. Tamales are usually corn
husks filled with cheese and sweetened
sour cream.
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tamari An aged soy sauce containing no sugars.
Tamari sauce is a generic term for a blend
of soy sauce, sesame oil and rice vinegar.
[see Tamari sauce]
tamarind The sweet flesh of the seed pod of the St.
Johns Bread tree. Used in Indian and
Southeast Asian cuisine for flavoring
sauces and drinks. Flour from the ground
seed or bean, called carob, is used in bak-
ing.
taro A plant that is an important food source to
peoples of the Pacific and in South Amer-
ica, where it is known as the Malanga. In
America it is known mostly as the orna-
mental elephant plant because of its
leaves. The green leaves of the taro can
be eaten if boiled for about an hour,
because of the high oxalic acid content
they are poisonous if eaten raw. The root
is boiled and used in many applications
such as the Hawaiian Poi.
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tarragon A leafy herb considered most sublime by
the French. Tarragons licorice like flavor is
almost identical to anise, and is used fresh
and dry.
tempeh A high protein food, rich in B vitamins
including B12, made from cultured soy
beans. Sometimes other grains are added
and fermented with the soy beans. Tem-
peh has been produced and consumed in
the Orient for thousands of years.[see
Vegan Meats chapter]
thyme One of the great garden herbs, thyme
comes in several varieties with different
bouquets and flavors. Used for stews,
sauces, soups, and sauts thyme deepens
the flavor of food. Thyme belongs to the
mint family.
tofu The pressed curd of soy milk made from
the soy bean. Tofu is easily digestible and
high in protein. A good source of B vita-
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mins and calcium, tofu has been a staple
protein food in the Orient for thousands of
years and in the United States, only a few
decades of use has made tofu a well
known food. Tofu comes in several forms:
soft, firm and extra firm tofu, silken tofu in
soft, firm and extra firm, dehydrated tofu
and tofu powder. [see Vegan Meats chap-
ter]
tomato The tomato is probably the most popular
and most used of all garden vegetables.
Tomatoes are one of the best sources of
vitamin C and A of any vegetable or fruit.
Tomatoes are canned more than any other
single vegetable in the United States.
Originating in Central America, the tomato
was eaten by American colonists before it
was a staple of sauce making in Italy.
Tomato belongs to the night shade family
of plants.
truffle A fungus prized for its flavor is one of the
worlds most expensive foods. Truffles defy
cultivation and only grow underground
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near oak trees. The black French truffles
have the best flavor and can only be for-
aged by trained pigs. Truffles have a very
strong aroma and flavor and should be
used sparingly. Shavings are usually suffi-
cient when added to a dish at the end of
the cooking period.
tuber An enlarged section of a plants stem that
is buried and close to the root of the plant.
Many plants produce edible tubers such as
the potato, taro and yam. Edible tubers
are usually starchy vegetables.
TVP TVP (Textured Vegetable Protein) is a
fibrous soy protein product that resembles
animal flesh. Generally TVP is sold in
granular, chunked or in various mixes with
other vegetable sourced ingredients. An
extensive line of cold cuts made with TVP,
i.e. bacon, ham, turkey etc., are available
on the market as well.
[see Vegan Meats chapter]
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TVP burger blend A dehydrated blend of isolated soy and
wheat proteins, with vegetables and spices,
which are reconstituted into a ground meat
analogue.
[see Vegan Meats chapter]
vanilla Produced from a bean that grows from a
vine belonging to the orchid family, vanilla
is a flavoring extract that is used in desserts
and confections. Native to the tropics,
vanilla was first cultivated in Mexico.
vinaigrette A salad dressing made with herbs,
optional flavorings and a 3:1 ratio of oil to
vinegar.
vinegar The product of fermented wine, fruit juice
or cereals, vinegar is a sour liquid sub-
stance used in salad dressings and pickled
foods. Vinegar is made by oxidizing the
alcohol away from the fermented liquid.
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vital wheat gluten The essential protein derived from wheat.
A natural water extraction process pro-
duces a fine powder of isolated proteins,
known commercially as Vital Wheat Glu-
ten.
vitamins A group of complex compounds found in
living matter that are essential for main-
taining human health. Vitamins are identi-
fied as A, B complex, C, D, E and K and can
all be obtained from vegetable sourced
foods. Vitamin B-12 can be obtained from
some fermented foods and yeast.
walnut A popular edible nut that is native to the
North America and southern Europe with
the U.S. the worlds chief producer. Wal-
nuts are high in protein, oil and B vitamins.
wild rice A small reed like rice that grows wild in the
great lakes region of the U.S. and Canada.
A staple food of the Indians native to that
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region it is high in B vitamins, starch and
protein. Popular a pilaf grain.
won ton A stuffed Chinese wheat pastry or dump-
ling cooked in soup or liquid. Usually
made with eggs, won tons can be made
vegan.
xanthum gum A vegetable starch binding agent used in
baking and other applications for thicken-
ing moist foods.
xylitol A sugar derived from birch tree sap, it is a
more complex carbohydrate than sugar
and metabolized slower. Xylitol contains
half the calories than contained in the
same amount of white sugar.
yam A member of the sweet potato family, this
edible starchy tuber of a tropical climbing
plant is orange-red in appearance.
Though not as sweet, and much larger in
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average size, this tuber can be used as a
substitute for sweet potatoes.
zucchini A member of the squash family, also call
Italian squash. Zucchini is a soft summer
squash.
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Appendix
Herb/Spice Table Weve included the following chart to assist
in the procurement of herbs and spices that
are needed for a particular cuisine. This
table should help reduce excess pantry
stock.
HERB/SPICE A B C D E F G H I J
allspice X X X X X X X
anise clove X X X X X
basil X X X
bay leaves X X X X
cajun spice
blend
X X X
caraway seeds X X X
cardamom X X X X X
cayenne X X X X X X X X
celery seeds X X X X
chili powder X X X X X
HERB/SPICE A B C D E F G H I J
Country Codes
[ A ] African
[ B ] North American
[ C ] Continental
[ D ] Italian
[ E ] Indian
[ F ] Middle Eastern
[ G ] Mexican
[ H ] Oriental
[ I ] Pacific
[ J ] South American
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cilantro X X X X X
cinnamon X X X X X X X
clove X X X X X X X
coriander X X X X X X
cumin X X X X X
curry powder X X
dill X X X
ginger X X X
mace X X X X X X
marjoram X X X
mint X X X X X X X X X X
mustard X X X X X X X
nutmeg X X X X X
onion powder X X X X X X X
oregano X X X
paprika X X X
parsley X X X X X X X X X
rosemary X X X X X
sage X X X X
savory X X X
tarragon X X X X
thyme X X X X X X
HERB/SPICE A B C D E F G H I J
HERB/SPICE A B C D E F G H I J
Country Codes
[ A ] African
[ B ] North American
[ C ] Continental
[ D ] Italian
[ E ] Indian
[ F ] Middle Eastern
[ G ] Mexican
[ H ] Oriental
[ I ] Pacific
[ J ] South American
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There are times when you need to substi-
tute an ingredient, or vary a recipes flavor.
The following two charts are designed to
assist in that process.
Herb Application
Chart
HERB A B C D E F G H
basil X X X X X
bay leaves X X
cilantro X X X X X
dill X X X X X X X
marjoram X X X X X X
mint X X X X X X X X
oregano X X X X X X
parsley X X X X X
rosemary X X X X X
sage X X X X X
savory X X X X X
tarragon X X
thyme X X X X X X
HERB A B C D E F G H
Application Codes
[ A ] SALAD
[ B ] SOUP
[ C ] SAUCES
[ D ] SAUTES
[ E ] CASSEROLE
[ F ] BREADS
[ G ] DESSERTS
[ H ] MISC.
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Spice Application
Chart
SPICE A B C D E F G H
allspice X X X X X X X X
anise clove X X X X X
cajun spice
blend
X X X X X
caraway seed X X
cardamom X X X X X
cayenne X X X X X X X
celery seeds X X X X
chili powder X X X X X
cinnamon X X X X X X X
clove X X X X
coriander X X X X X X
cumin X X X X X
curry paste X X
curry powder X X X X X
dill seed X X
fenugreek X X X
file powder X X X
garlic powder X X X X X X
SPICE A B C D E F G H
Application Codes
[ A ] SALAD
[ B ] SOUP
[ C ] SAUCES
[ D ] SAUTES
[ E ] CASSEROLE
[ F ] BREADS
[ G ] DESSERTS
[ H ] MISC.
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Cooking-Time Table Baked root vegetables and squashes are
tasty and healthy ways to eat these foods.
The following is a cooking chart for baking:
ginger X X X X X X X
mace X X X X
mustard X X X X X
nutmeg X X X X X
onion powder X X X X X X
paprika X X X X X
SPICE A B C D E F G H
SPICE A B C D E F G H
Table 8: Cooking-Time Table
VEGETABLE OVEN TEMP COOKING TIME
acorn, butternut squash 450F 45-60 Min
baking potatoes 450F 45-60 Min
sweet potato / yam 450F 45-60 Min
onion 400F 30-45 Min
garlic clove 450F 20-25 Min
tomato 450F 20-25 Min
eggplant 450F 30-45 Min
zucchini, summer squash 400F 35-45 Min
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For other unusual tubers or squashes, baking time depends on size and
hardness of vegetable. When baking whole vegetable, simple place in a
hot oven. Thin skinned squashes and potatoes should be wrapped in alu-
minum foil or otherwise covered. If vegetables are cut in half and stuffed,
be sure to baste and keep loosely covered for at least first half of baking
time.
Hot Pepper Chart One of the most critical aspects of profes-
sional cooking, is knowing when enough is
enough! When it comes to adjusting how
hot a recipe should be, use this guide:
Table 9: Hot Pepper Chart
PEPPER NAME (CONDITION) HEAT SCALE
Demre (fresh) 1
Sante Fe Grande (fresh) 2
Serrano (fresh)
Banana Peppers (fresh)
3
Mexican Negro (fresh) 4
Yellow Peter (fresh)
Jalapeno (fresh)
Long Hot Finger (fresh)
5
Bermuda (fresh)
Turkish (fresh)
6
Aji Yellow (dried)
Pueblo (dried)
7
PEPPER NAME (CONDITION) HEAT SCALE
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Note: The above chart indicates the range of spice-heat supplied by indi-
vidual peppers. Combinations of different peppers, used in different
quantities, can supply the necessary heat as desired in a dish. Increasing
the amount of peppers used in a foods preparation will increase the spice
heat of the food. However, peppers rated lower on the heat scale cannot
increase the spice heat of a dish beyond the upper middle range of num-
bers. Only the hottest of peppers govern the highest numbers on the Hot
Pepper Chart.
Thai Sun (dried)
Giant Serrano (dried)
Hot Lemon (dried)
8
Scotch Bonnet (dried)
Brown Congo (dried)
Red Chili (fresh)
9
Habenero (dried)
Tabasco (fresh)
10
Table 9: Hot Pepper Chart
PEPPER NAME (CONDITION) HEAT SCALE
PEPPER NAME (CONDITION) HEAT SCALE
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Food Pyramid Ive included a food pyramid to illustrate
the optimum daily food requirements for a
vegan diet. These suggestions are based on an adult of average size and
weight, and can be adjusted to compensate for individual life-styles.
Table 10: Optimum Daily Food Requirements
WHOLE GRAINS 1/2 - 1 LB 40% 1000 CALORIES
VEGETABLES & FRUITS 1 - 2 LB 30% 700 - 1000 CALORIES
VEGETABLE PROTEINS 50 - 65 GRAMS 20% 350 - 500 CALORIES
OILS & FATS 2 - 5 OZ 10% 200 - 400 CALORIES
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Measurement
Conversion Table
Table 11: Measurement Conversion Table
tsp = 60 drops
teaspoon = 1/3 Tbsp [ Tablespoon ]
pinch = 1/8 tsp [ teaspoon ]
Tbsp = 3 tsp [ teaspoons ]
oz = 2 Tbsp [ Tablespoons ]
4 Tablespoons = 1/4 cup
8 Tablespoons = 1/2 cup
16 Tablespoons = 1 cup
cup = 8 oz [ ounces ]
pt = 2 cups
ounce [ oz ] = 28 g [ grams ]
qt = 2 pt [ pints ]
2 quarts = 1/2 gal [ gallon ]
gal = 128 oz [ ounces ]
lb = 16 oz [ ounces ]
kilogram = 2.2 lb [ pounds ]
peck = 8 qt [ quarts ]
bushel = 4 pecks
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Metric Conversion
Terms
g = gram
kg = kilogram
m = meter
cm = centimeter
mm = millimeter
km = kilometer
l = liter
ml = milliliter
Table 12: Metric to Standard Table
Liquid Quantities Dry Quantities
5ml =
1 teaspoon
14 grams =
1/2 ounce
20ml =
1 Tablespoon
28 grams =
1 ounce
30ml =
1 fluid ounce
244 grams =
8 ounces
250ml =
8 fluid ounces
488 grams =
1 pound
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Resource Directory
Introduction This resource directory is a guide and refer-
ence, for the purchasing of vegan ingredi-
ents. Included are the names of
companies and distributors of food prod-
ucts, which are used at Veggie Works.
Vegan cuisine is based upon quality andin-
novation. As such, we welcome your sug-
gestions and recommendations! Based on
personal experience, I know youll develop
your own approaches to my processes. Fell
free to share them! Veggie Works is a suc-
cessful business, due to our belief that
shared experience leads to refinement. So
again, when you come across products and
techniques, that will improve the joy of
cooking, wed love receive your sugges-
tions!
In the case of fresh produce, many of these
sources have to be geographically accessi-
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ble. We recommend that you make every
attempt to purchase from local farms, and
try adjusting recipes to utilize geographi-
cally seasonable produce. When purchas-
ing from large grocers, influence the
produce departments manager to use
local sources! This practice will not only
contribute to your communities local econ-
omy, but will also go a long way towards
returning agriculture to a environmentally
benign industry.
Baking Mixes, Flours, Pastas & Cereals
Veggie Works, Inc. (vegan meats, tvp, wheat gluten, seitan)
817 Belmar Shopping Plaza
Belmar, NJ 07719
888.950.7576
www.veggieworksworld.com
Arrowhead Mills, Inc. (grains, cereals)
Box 2059
Hereford, TX 79045
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Athens Pastries &
Frozen Foods, Inc.
(puff pastry, filo dough)
Cleveland, OH 44142-2596
Eden Foods, Inc. (soy & grain products, cereals)
Clinton, MI 49236
www.edenfoods.com
Millinas Organic
Pasta
(rice pasta)
(Arrowhead Mills)
PO Box 550 Aptos, CA 95001-0550
DeBoles Organic
Pastas
(pasta)
(Arrowhead Mills)
1-800-749-0730
King Arthur Flour (unbleached white flour)
Norwich, VT
1-800-777-4434
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General Mills, Inc. (grains, cereals)
Minneapolis, MN 55440
S.B. Thomas (grains, cereals)
(affiliate of Best Foods, Inc.)
PO Box 535
Totowah, NJ 07511-0535
Hodgeson
Mill, Inc.
(grains, cereals)
1203 Niccum Ave.,
Effingham, IL 62401
1-800-5250177, ext 31
Natural Foods, Inc. Milwaukie, OR 97222
Jaclyns Food Prod-
ucts, Inc.
Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
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Annie Chuns Gour-
met Foods, Inc.
P.O. Box 2418
San Rafael, CA 94901
455-479-8272
www.anniechun.com
Produce
A&P (organic produce, misc health food products)
2 Paragon Drive
Montvale, NJ 07645
201.573.9700
www.aptca.com
Foodtown (organic produce, misc health food products)
www.shopfoodtown.com
Wild Oats (organic produce, misc health food products)
1.800.494.WILD
www.wildoat.com
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Fresh Fields (organic produce, misc health food products)
632.936.1960
917.810.1667
Soy Products
EdenSoy (soy milk, soy products)
Eden Foods, Inc.
701 Tecumseh Road,
Clinton, MI 49236
1-888-769-6455
Silk (soy milk, soy products)
White Wave, Inc.
Boulder, CO 80301
1-800-488-9283
Vitasoy USA Inc. (soy milk, soy products)
PO Box 2012,
South San Francisco, CA 94083
1-800-VITASOY (848-2769)
www.vitasoy-usa.com
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Mori-Nu Tofu (tofu, silken)
PO Box 6160,
Torrance, CA 90504
(Dist.: Morinaga Nutritional Foods)
(2050 W. 190th St., #110)
(Torrance, CA 90404)
1-800-669-8638
Fresh Tofu, Inc. (tofu, tempeh, tvp, ect.)
1101 Harrison St.
Allentown, PA 18103
Kikkoman
Foods, Inc.
(soy sauce)
Walworth, WI 53184
Tree of Life, Inc. dist.: Soy Kaas
(soy cheeses, tofu)
St. Augustine, FL 32085-0410
1-800-238-3947
treeoflife.com
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Naysoya, Inc. (soy cheeses, tofu)
Ayer, MA 01432
1-800-229-TOFU
WholeSoy Co. (soy cream, yogurt)
49 Stevenson St. #1075
San Francisco CA 94105
415-495-2870
www.wholesoy.com
Smoke & Fire
Natural Foods, Inc.
(tofu & tempeh - smoked)
P.O. Box 743
Gt. Barrington, MA 01230
413-528-6891
www.smokeandfire.com
Tofutti Brands, Inc. (soy cheeses, ice creams, ect.)
Cranford, NJ 07016
www.tofuttibrandsinc.com
www.tofutti@nac.net
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TVP Products
Veggie Works, Inc. (vegan meats, tvp, wheat gluten, seitan)
817 Belmar Shopping Plaza
Belmar, NJ 07719
888.950.7576
www.veggieworksworld.com
White Wave, Inc. 1-800-488-9283
whitewave.com
Herb, Spice, Seasonings
McCormack
& Co., Inc.
(herbs & spices)
Hunt Valley, MD 21031-1100
1-800-632-5847
Magic Seasonings
Blends, Inc.
(cajun seasoning blends)
824 distributors Row
Harahan, LA 70123
1-800-457-2857
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Frontier Natural
Products CO-OP
(herbs & spices)
Norway, IA 52318
1-800-669-3275
www.frontiercorp.com
C.V. Finer Foods, Inc. PO Box 88, Winthrop, ME 04364
1-800-355-6221
Knor Foods, Inc. (dehydrated soups, boullions, spices)
CPC Food Service
Dist. CPC International Inc.
Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632-9976
Lewis Laboratories
International, Ltd.
49 Richmondwille Row
Westport, CT 06880
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Beans, Nuts, Seeds & Grains
Frontier Herbs, Inc. (bulk nuts, seeds)
www.frontiercoop.com
Goya Foods, Inc. (oils, beans, spice blends)
Secaucus, NJ 07096
1-888-298-0849
Thep Padung Porn
Coconut Co.
(coconut milk, flakes)
Bangkok, Thailand
Woodstock Farms,
Inc.
(bulk grains, nuts, seeds)
1-800-526-4349
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Sweeteners & Baking Agents
Cloud Nine
Distributors
Hoboken, NJ 07030
Now Foods, Inc. Bloomingdale, IL 60108
Ener-G Foods, Inc. (egg replacement substitute)
P.O.Box 84487
Seattle, WA 98124-5787
www.ener-g.com
1-800-331-5222
Cumberland
Baking Co.
Brooklyn, NY 11205
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Tree of Life, Inc. (natural foods distributor, baking agents)
St. Augustine, FL 32085-0410
1-800-238-3947
treeoflife.com
Chatfields
Chocolate Chips
(vegan chocolate chips)
American Natural Snacks
St. Augustine, FL
Sunspire, Inc. (chocolate chips)
2114 Adams Ave.
San Leandro, CA94577
510-569-9731
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Misc Grocer
A&P (organic produce, misc health food products)
2 Paragon Drive
Montvale, NJ 07645
201.573.9700
www.aptca.com
Foodtown (organic produce, misc health food products)
www.shopfoodtown.com
Wild Oats (organic produce, misc health food products)
1.800.494.WILD
www.wildoat.com
Fresh Fields (organic produce, misc health food products)
632.936.1960
917.810.1667
Live Food Products (Braggs Liquid Aminos)
Santa Barbara, CA 93102
1-800-446-1990
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Vegan Meats
Veggie Works, Inc. (vegan meats, tvp, wheat gluten, seitan)
817 Belmar Shopping Plaza
Belmar, NJ 07719
888.950.7576
www.veggieworksworld.com
Smart Deli (vegan deli meats)
Lightlife
Foods, Inc.
153 Industrial Blvd.
Turners Falls, MA 01376
1-800-SOY EASY M-F 9-5 EST
www.Lightlife.com
Yves Fine
Foods, Inc.
(meat analogs, vegan deli meats)
Yves Veggie cuisine, Inc.
Delta (Vancouver), BC Canada
www.yvesveggie.com
Vegi-Deli (sliced vegan deli meats)
Green Options, Inc.
P.O. Box 881781
1-888-473-3667
www.vegideli.com
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Oils & Butters
Crazy Richards Pea-
nut Butter
(peanut butter)
PO Box 715
Dublin, OH 43017
www. crazyrichards.com
Barleans
Organic Oils
(flax oil)
4936 Lake Terrel Rd.,
Ferndale, WA 98248
1-800-445-3529
Spectrum Natural
Foods, Inc.
(olive oil, balsamic vinegar, etc.)
www.spectrumnaturals.com
1-800-995-2705
The Hain Food
Group, Inc.
(oils, condiments, etc.)
Uniondale, NY 11553
1-800-434-4246
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California Olive Oil
Corp.
(imported olive oil)
134 Canal St.
Salem, MA 01970
www.olive-oil.com
Joyva Corp. (sesame butter)
Brooklyn, NY 11237
Goya Foods, Inc. (oils, beans, spice blends)
Secaucus, NJ 07096
Kadoya Sesame
Mills, Inc.
Japan
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705
Homespun Recipes
Introduction Recipes are not written in stone! There are
factors, such as available ingredients and
desired serving size, which can influence
the final results of any recipe. We recog-
nize that you are going to adjust many of
this books recipes, to suit your personal
needs...and taste! For this reason, a spe-
cial chapter is devoted to your creative
genius. Most important, you should recog-
nize that cooking is also a statement of
ones personal beliefs; that it is a heritage,
passed down through the generations;
from father to daughter, mother to grand-
mother! For this reason, the reader should
document their experience with vegan cui-
sine, not just for friends and family, but for
future generations as well.
With this philosophy in mind, the following
pages include ten recipe templates. These
blank templates include space for your rec-
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ipes introductory statement, twenty rows
for ingredient listings, and three pages for
instructions. Obviously, they must be
printed out, to use. Before you do any
writing in print outs, make sure youve read
the following guidelines:
First, document all of your steps on sepa-
rate scratch paper. (You can always use
the printed sheets as scratch paper.) When
youve streamlined your recipe, only then
should you formally document this infor-
mation onto the template pages. You
should always enter a recipe title, short
description, your name and (for historical
reasons) the date you entered the recipe.
All ingredients are entered into the ingredi-
ents table in the same order theyre called
for in the actual cooking instructions. The
cooking instructions should include prepa-
ratory steps in the opening paragraphs.
Next, the cooking steps themselves, and
finally, any suggested presentation tips.
This protocol will reinforce discipline, and
help you to avoid any chance that youve
707
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omitted relevant ingredients and instruc-
tional steps. Most published recipes dem-
onstrate this formal process. To the
uninitiated, this procedure may seem a bit
extraneous. Just remind yourself whenever
you find yourself tempted to cut corners,
future generations will salute you for
insight and good taste!
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D5CRlPTlON:
AUTHOR: DAT: / /
NOT5:
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MEASURE INGREDIENT
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Index
The following is an extensive index
of the Veggie Works Vegan Cook-
book. Recipe titles are red colored
and bold-italicized; corresponding
page locations also red colored.
Blue colored entries are glossary ref-
erences, with the balance going to
relevant chapters and subjects of
interest. To facilitate cross-referenc-
ing of entries, all relevant page
numbers have been preserved.
Every effort has been expended to
ensure the integrity this index. If
errors are discovered, wed genu-
inely appreciate knowing about
them; so please email your flags to:
<haphazzard@earthlink.net>, with
Index Error in the subject header.
A
A-1 sauce 433, 605
acorn squash 25, 78, 309, 679
active dry yeast 440, 442, 445, 457, 459, 474,
476, 479
Adobe 650
agar agar 22, 539, 547, 558, 577, 585, 610
aldente 258
alfalfa sprouts 145, 146
Alfredo Sauce 180, 411
All American Barbecue - theme 603
allspice 21, 40, 42, 107, 108, 132, 200, 201,
220, 363, 368, 388, 403, 497, 531, 567, 610, 675,
678
almond 610
almond extract 578
almonds 554
aluminum foil 544
ambrosia 59
American diet 7, 331, 435
American Stew 359, 593
American Sunday Picnic - theme 602
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American White Bean Soup 79, 591, 605
amino acids 511, 515
animal products 4
anise 21, 98, 611, 675, 678
Appendix chapter 675
apple 33, 529, 536, 559
apple cider vinegar 22, 29, 35, 36, 39, 43, 46,
47, 52, 53, 57, 58, 60, 62, 63, 66, 67, 71, 73, 75,
76, 85, 98, 102, 156, 182, 196, 197, 208, 210,
213, 214, 217, 227, 312, 318, 461, 534
apple juice 559
Apple Pie 530, 598, 607
apple sauce 529, 607
Apple Sauce Doughnuts 529, 602
arrowroot 611
arrowroot powder 188, 206, 369
artichoke 225, 267, 611
artichoke hearts 275
Artichokes Italian Style 225, 607
asafetida 20, 612
Asian 366
asparagus 24, 90, 293, 324, 372, 379, 396,
401, 403, 405, 407, 412, 426, 433, 590
au gratin 612
Au Gratin Vegetables 224, 596
Author 13
Autumn Moon Soup 78, 591
avocado 59, 64, 65, 69, 72, 145, 146, 612
Avocado & Hummus Sandwich 144, 602
Avocado & Soy Cheese Sandwich 146,
604
B
Babaganouj 28, 599, 606
baby carrots 266
Baby Food chapter 581
Baby's '1ello' 585
Baby`s Fruit 583
Baby`s Grains 584
Baby`s Nut-Seed Milk 586
Baby`s Pudding 587
Baby`s Salad 588
Baby`s Soy Milk 589
Baby`s Steamed Vegetables 590
bacon 147, 510
bacon bits 510
Bacon Lettuce & Tomato Sandwich 147,
510, 603, 605
bake 612
Baked Beans 227, 608
Baked Butternut Soup 81
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Baked Cauliflower 229, 592, 596, 597
Baked Custard 532, 593
baked potato 605
Baked Potato Fries 230
Baked Tofu Turkey 171, 508, 598, 602
Baked Tofu Turkey Sandwich 148
baking potatoes 679
baking powder 231, 242, 251, 256, 438, 439,
449, 451, 453, 455, 463, 465, 466, 469, 470, 472,
504, 515, 516, 520, 522, 529, 534, 536, 542, 562,
565, 568, 570, 571, 574, 576, 578
Baking Powder Biscuits 438, 593, 597
Baking Powder Dumplings 231, 592
baking soda 461, 465, 469, 504, 534, 546, 557,
568, 576
baking stone 462
balsamic vinegar 22, 49, 57, 127, 192, 220,
612
Balti Stir Fry 361
banana 33, 534, 535, 613
Banana Cake 533, 561, 604
Banana Flamb 535, 599
banana, green 414
Bangkok Black Bean Sauce 181
barbecue 331, 353
Barbecue Gluten Steak 344
barbecuing 613
Barley 232, 318, 592
barley 120, 133, 584, 613
barley malt syrup 586, 613
Basic Barbecue Sauce 170, 182, 344, 433,
603
Basic Bean Burger 150
Basic Muffins 451
Basic Pie Crust 531, 536, 537, 540, 553, 560,
567
Basic Pie Crust II 537, 560, 567
Basic Seitan 513
Basic Wheat Pancakes 465, 473
basil 20, 35, 49, 57, 60, 61, 104, 135, 192, 203,
204, 209, 314, 370, 378, 407, 412, 425, 428, 614,
675, 677
basmati rice 20, 362, 392, 614
baste 614
batter 450, 473
Bavarian Cream Pie 539, 597, 604
bay leaves 20, 79, 84, 89, 94, 121, 123, 136,
204, 496, 614, 675, 677
bean sprouts 24, 406, 614
Beans 233
beans 23, 77, 118, 150, 223, 325, 615
Beef & Bean Burrito 273, 598
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Beef Enchiladas 274, 598
beets 266
berries 536, 540, 569, 570
Berry Pie 540, 598
beta carotene 99
Birch Sugar Syrup 541, 602, 604, 607
biscuits 436
Black Bean Burger 151
black beans 23, 118, 123, 130, 151, 164, 181,
273, 293, 327
black olive 295, 306, 408
black pepper 20, 616
blanch 616
blueberries 473
Blueberry Pancakes 473, 606
boil 616
bok choy 24, 47, 113, 318, 374, 376, 405, 414,
421, 617
bouillon 22, 139
bovine spongiform encephalopathy 8
Bragg`s Liquid Aminos 617
Braised String Beans & Mushrooms 234
braising 357, 487, 617
bread 487
Bread & Cornbread Stuffing 235, 598
bread crumbs 20, 150, 151, 153, 154, 173,
175, 229, 256, 281, 283, 307, 310, 311, 314, 321,
326, 401, 487, 494, 501, 502, 507, 523, 524
breadmaking 435
Breads & Doughs chapter 435
breakfast 447
Breakfast 'Sausage' 496, 607
breast feeding 581
brewed coffee 561
broccoli 24, 30, 34, 47, 90, 111, 167, 177, 275,
293, 301, 324, 354, 371, 372, 391, 396, 403, 406,
407, 411, 412, 419, 420, 422, 423, 426, 431, 590,
617
Broccoli & Artichoke Casserole 275
broil 487
broth 618
brown 387
Brown Gravy 149, 153, 154, 184, 215, 326,
380, 384, 410, 417, 592, 597, 604, 608
Brown Rice 40, 82, 105, 141, 236, 259, 273,
278, 297, 306, 310, 315, 327, 329, 341, 343, 347,
355, 362, 366, 367, 369, 373, 375, 377, 379, 382,
384, 389, 390, 392, 394, 395, 400, 404, 407, 415,
418, 419, 421, 422, 424, 425, 427, 429, 430, 434,
543, 584, 592, 599, 618
brown rice 20, 236, 237, 618
Brown Rice Pudding 543
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brown rice syrup 22, 63, 197, 214, 218, 543,
555, 562, 574, 618
Brown Sugar Stars 544
Brownies 542, 561
BSE 8
Buffalo Hot Sauce 185, 238
buffalo wings 185
Buffalo Wings, Tofu 237
Bulgar Wheat 158, 238, 607
bulgar wheat 20, 51, 238, 259, 619
buns 436
burger 143, 150, 163, 173
burgers 337
Burgers & Hotdogs 337
Burgers & Sandwiches chapter 143
burrito 271, 273, 328, 349
Burritos 327
bushel 683
butternut squash 24, 78, 81, 309, 619, 679
button mushrooms 383, 416
C
cabbage 29, 53, 82, 111, 135, 156, 263, 312,
385
Cabbage Potato Rice Soup 82
Cacciatore 428
Cajun 189, 365, 394
cajun spice blend 20, 57, 64, 65, 69, 72, 84,
87, 130, 145, 146, 151, 152, 154, 158, 189, 191,
224, 237, 242, 299, 365, 370, 378, 395, 401, 409,
423, 619, 675, 678
cake icing 555
cakes 528, 544, 575
calcium 101
Calzone 276, 308
calzone 457
canadian bacon 36, 171, 240, 607
canap 619
Candied Yams 239, 596, 597
candy 554
canola oil 23, 237, 246, 248, 251, 263, 284,
286, 620
cantilini beans 23, 79, 101, 111, 118, 125, 619
capers 219, 306, 382, 620
caramelize 387, 418, 544
caraway 620
caraway seeds 21, 29, 459, 675, 678
carbohydrates 232
cardamom 20, 100, 388, 620, 675, 678
Caribbean 108
carob 621
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carrot 24, 29, 40, 47, 72, 79, 82, 89, 94, 96, 99,
108, 111, 113, 115, 118, 121, 123, 124, 128, 133,
135, 138, 150, 151, 156, 175, 177, 231, 259, 266,
269, 293, 299, 301, 304, 325, 353, 359, 361, 363,
366, 367, 368, 370, 372, 374, 376, 378, 382, 383,
385, 391, 393, 394, 397, 400, 401, 403, 405, 407,
414, 418, 420, 421, 423, 433, 517, 590, 621
cashews 368
casserole 224, 238, 275, 284, 286, 288, 298,
312, 322, 487, 493, 513, 621
casseroles 194
Casseroles & Stuffed Things chapter
271
catsup 640
cauliflower 24, 229, 293, 354, 361, 363, 367,
391, 398, 403, 590, 621
cayenne 21, 58, 69, 85, 181, 196, 199, 201, 208,
217, 218, 312, 386, 389, 622, 675, 678
celery 25, 36, 43, 46, 49, 72, 79, 83, 87, 89, 90,
111, 115, 118, 121, 128, 133, 135, 138, 235, 259,
293, 296, 300, 304, 306, 359, 381, 506, 622
celery seeds 21, 675, 678
ceramic briskets 332
cereal 255
chapati 622
charcoal 332
chard 385
Cheese Sauce 186, 592
Chef 13
Chicken Fried Gluten Cutlet 524, 608
Chicken Fried Gluten Sandwich 152, 603
Chicken Fried Tofu Sandwich 154, 602
chickpeas 25, 42, 52, 70, 118, 136, 158, 361,
363, 367, 382, 391, 398, 408, 622
Chili 83
chili 623
chili peppers 623
chili powder 20, 84, 151, 191, 205, 623, 675,
678
Chili Rejenos 251
chilies 286
Chimichanga 278, 598
Chinese 208, 483
Chinese cabbage 53
Chinese Cabbage Spring Roll 156, 600
Chinese Noodle Soup 85
Chipped 'Beef' & Noodles 279
chlorophyll 623
chocolate 624
chocolate cake 555, 575
chocolate chips 542, 546, 547, 549, 550, 564,
565
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Chocolate Drop Cookies 545, 597, 607
chocolate flavored graham crackers 548
Chocolate Mousse 547, 606
Chocolate Peanut Butter Cheesecake
548, 597, 608
Chocolate Tofu Icing 550
Christmas - theme 596
Christmas Logs 551, 597
Chutney 67, 251, 600
cilantro 21, 44, 53, 74, 132, 624, 676, 677
Cinco De Mayo - theme 598
cinnamon 21, 67, 107, 108, 132, 201, 227, 369,
447, 529, 531, 543, 556, 559, 562, 567, 571, 624,
676, 678
Cinnamon Rolls 456
Cleaning Produce 16
clove 21, 67, 560, 567, 624, 676, 678
coals 332, 355
cocoa 542, 561, 576, 625
coconut 625
Coconut Cream Pie 552
coconut extract 552
coconut milk 109, 132, 201, 210, 218, 369,
391
coffee 369, 555, 561
coffee cake 436
cognac 535, 573
Cold Broccoli Salad 30, 591, 596, 601, 604
cold cuts 491
Coleslaw 29, 608
collard greens 240
Collards Southern Style 240
Combining Baby Foods 582
condiments 27
Condiments & Sweeteners 22
consomm 625
cookies 528, 545, 551, 568
cooking string 319
Cooking-Time Table 679
coriander 20, 100, 158, 403, 496, 626, 676,
678
corn 25, 242, 247, 319, 626
Corn Bread 439, 593, 598
Corn Chowder 87, 598
corn husks 319
corn meal 20
Corn Meal Pancakes 470
corn meal, fine grain 515
corn meal, polenta 298
corn meal, yellow 251, 439, 453, 470
Corn Muffins 453, 607
corn oil 627
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Corn or Vegetable Fritters 242, 600
corn syrup 627
corn, fresh 45, 87, 110, 269, 278, 286, 296,
301, 327, 338, 369
corn, white 319
cornbread 449
cornbread stuffing mix 235
cornflakes 285, 322
cornstarch 20, 86, 98, 105, 115, 117, 127, 181,
182, 188, 190, 192, 196, 198, 199, 200, 202, 203,
205, 206, 207, 208, 211, 212, 213, 217, 218, 242,
266, 287, 301, 305, 307, 322, 336, 338, 346, 362,
369, 371, 379, 389, 400, 401, 404, 406, 413, 420,
423, 427, 433, 504, 531, 540, 547, 587, 611, 627
Country Lentil Soup 88, 592, 606
Couscous 241
couscous 21, 41, 241, 364, 584, 627
Couscous Succotash 363
cow 8
cracker 627
cracker meal 275, 280
cranberries 187
Cranberry Sauce 187, 598
cream 628
Cream of Broccoli Soup 90, 592, 597
Cream of Mushroom Soup 91, 596
Cream of Tomato Soup 93, 592, 597
Creamed Curry Sauce 188, 600
Creamy Cucumber Dressing 54, 604
Creamy Garlic Dressing 55
Creamy Ranch Dressing 56, 597, 607
Credits statement a-b
Creole Madness 365
Creole Sauce 189
crepes 436
Croissants 440
croutons 235, 628
crudite 602, 606, 628
crust 557
Crust Cookies 553, 593
cucumber 25, 34, 54, 103, 145, 176, 400, 588,
628
cumin 20, 28, 42, 45, 69, 73, 84, 100, 108, 110,
158, 201, 205, 306, 363, 382, 388, 398, 403, 496,
629, 676, 678
cup - equivalent measurement 683
Curried Enlightenment 366, 600
Curried Lentil Soup 94, 600
Curried Root Soup 96, 600
Curried Spinach Potato Soup 95
curry paste 629, 678
curry powder 20, 94, 95, 97, 188, 250, 299,
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361, 367, 391, 629, 676, 678
custard 629
D
daikon radish 98, 156, 318
Daikon Radish Soup 98, 601
dandelion 630
Darwin's Natural Selection 368
dates 630
decorate 544
deep frying 486, 630
defrost 630
deglaze 630
Designer 14
Desserts chapter 527
dijon mustard 22, 190, 426, 630
Dijon Wine Sauce 190
dill 20, 40, 389, 398, 631, 676, 677
dill seed 678
dinner rolls 436
dipping sauce 185
Dips 27, 66
ditilini pasta 21, 125
dough 436, 477, 531, 540, 553
doughnut 571
dredge 487, 631
Dressings 27, 54
dulse seaweed 113, 400, 588
dumplings 231, 317, 318, 436, 462, 631
durham wheat noodles 279
E
edamame 631
Egg Substitute 449, 465, 466, 470, 503, 504,
529, 532, 533, 542, 543, 545, 547, 549, 552, 562,
565, 571, 575, 578
Eggless Egg 444, 445, 451, 453, 467, 468, 503,
545, 551, 562, 567, 568
Eggless Egg Salad 31, 602
eggplant 28, 159, 161, 281, 294, 296, 308, 309,
388, 403, 416, 631, 679
Eggplant Parmigiani 281, 601
Egyptian Carrot Yam Soup 99
Egyptian Date Nut Candy 554, 600
elbow macaroni 32, 253, 284
Elbow Macaroni Salad 32, 591, 602, 606
elbow pasta 136
electric mixer 576
enchilada 274, 349
Enchilada Sauce 191, 274, 294
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endive 24, 632
Escarole 243, 605
escarole 24, 101, 111, 243, 372, 632
Escarole & Bean Soup 101, 592
Etruscan Sauce 192, 372, 373
Euro-Asian Vinaigrette 57, 605
European 385, 458, 483
evaporated cane juice 547, 573
F
Factory farming 7
fajitas 205
Falafel 157, 216, 599
famous vegetarians 11
Farfel or Matzoh Brie 244
farina 584
fennel 24, 612, 632
fennel seeds 459, 496, 497
fenugreek 20, 633, 678
ferment 488
fiber 163
field greens 72, 219
figs 554, 633
file powder 21, 633, 678
fillet 378, 633
filling 313, 555
filo pastry 288
Final Thought 14
First Foods 581
Five Spice Powder 611
flatbread 458, 461
flax seed oil 23, 584, 589, 590, 633
flour 321
fold, to 634
Food Preparation 334
Food Pyramid 682
fortified soy milk 589
France 415
French 426, 440
French Bread 442, 448, 593, 601
French Dressing 58, 606
French Fried Potatoes 245, 604
French Onion Soup 102, 596
French Toast 444, 607
fresh baked bread 435
fresh fruit 59, 570
Fresh Fruit Salad Dressing 59, 599, 603
fresh herb 234
fricassee 634
Fricassee Sauce 194
Fried Noodles 246
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fritter 157, 634
From the Grill chapter 331
frosting 561, 564, 578
fructose 479, 529, 547, 571, 573, 634
fruit 27, 583, 585
Fruit & Nut Salad 33, 596
fruit brandy 573
fruit juice 532, 585
fudge 564
G
Gado Gado 374, 599
gal - equivalent measurement 683
Galapagos Islands 368
garbanzo beans 622
Garden Pasta Salad 34, 591, 602
garlic 634
Garlic and Oil 195, 262
Garlic Bread 448
garlic clove 24, 28, 30, 45, 49, 50, 52, 55, 57,
63, 69, 70, 73, 76, 84, 87, 101, 110, 111, 118,
121, 126, 130, 133, 138, 141, 150, 151, 158, 169,
181, 192, 195, 196, 198, 203, 212, 217, 219, 225,
243, 286, 291, 295, 296, 306, 309, 312, 314, 328,
363, 370, 371, 378, 382, 388, 394, 396, 403, 405,
407, 409, 412, 415, 431, 448, 499, 500, 525, 679
garlic powder 21, 31, 55, 56, 71, 108, 132,
183, 191, 200, 201, 205, 208, 211, 227, 288, 290,
497, 505, 507, 516, 678
Garlic Sesame Sauce 196, 377
Garlic Sesame Tofu 376, 601
Gas Grill Setup 332
Gazpacho Soup 103, 602
gelatin 610
German Chocolate Icing/Filling 555
German Coffee Cake 445, 447
German Kuchen dough 447
German Potato Salad 35, 596, 602, 603
Germany 556
Getting Started chapter 15
ginger 635, 676, 679
Ginger Bread Cookies 556
ginger powder 21, 107, 108, 200, 201, 531,
556, 560, 567
ginger root 21, 67, 76, 181, 211, 217, 318, 405
glaze 331, 343, 355, 456, 635
Glazing 336
Glossary chapter 609 - 2, 3
glucose 635
gluten 395, 450, 482, 488, 491, 635, 644
gluten cutlets 385, 524
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Gluten Diablo 378, 601
Gluten Roulade 525
gluten steak 344, 352, 482, 512
Gluten Steak Parmigiani 283
goulash 636
Graham Cracker Pie Crust 557, 558, 567
graham crackers 557
grain 223, 232, 261
Grains, Beans & Side Dishes chapter
223
gram - equivalent measurement 684
gramineae 636, 647
Grammy's Spaghetti 284
Granny Smith apple 531, 559
grapefruit 636
grapefruit juice 607
gravy 179, 636
great northern beans 23, 79, 118, 228
green apples 67
green cabbage 312
griddle 458
grill 247, 331, 353
Grill Accessories 333
Grill Goddess Sauce 37, 105, 160, 161, 197,
295, 308, 324, 338, 345, 353, 388, 433, 520
Grill Temperature 333
Grilled Corn on the Cob 247, 603
Grilled Leek Portabella Soup 338
Grilled Mexican Fajitas 340, 598
Grilled Portabella Leek Soup 105
Grilled Portabella Orzo Salad 37, 599
Grilled Portabella Sandwich 159, 161
Grilled Tofu Steak 345
Grilled Vegetable Melt Sandwich 161
Grilling Tips 332
grits 636
Guacamole 69, 164, 273, 293, 303, 327, 351,
353, 598
guacamole 637
gumbo 637
Gypsy's Fortune 380, 593
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H
habenero 21, 84, 109, 130, 202, 208, 319, 365,
637
Happy Family Kebabs 342
Harvest Burger 163, 351, 605
Hash Browns 248, 604
hazelnut 637
Heat Control 334
Herb Application Chart 677
Herb/Spice Table 675
Herbed Vinaigrette Dressing 60
herbs 203
hickory 336
Himalayan Rim Dinner - theme 600
hoisin paste 85, 637
Holiday Pumpkin Soup 106, 597
Hollandaise Sauce 198
Home Fries 249, 604, 606
Home Style Quick Bread 449
Homespun Recipes chapter 705
hominy 319, 638
honey 638
hors d`oeuvres 73, 262, 298, 314, 638
horseradish 21, 639
Hot Cross Buns 447, 456, 608
Hot Pepper Chart 680 - 286, 378, 622, 623,
637, 639
hot peppers 378
hotdogs 337
Hummus 70, 145, 591, 599, 606
Hungarian Goulash 385
Hungarian Style Pierogies 386
Hunter's Bounty 383
Hygiene 17
I
icing 555, 561
Imam's Delight 388, 600
Incan Quinoa Casserole 286
Index chapter i - xxxii , 3
India 361
Indian Samosas 250, 600
Indian Vegetable Curry 390, 600
instant coffee 555
Introduction 1, 331, 357, 435, 481, 527, 581
Island Blend Soup 108
isolated soy protein 490, 491
Ispanakli Borek 288, 600, 606
Italian 378, 412, 448
Italian frying peppers 382
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Italian Meatballs 500, 502, 601, 606
Italian Sausage 497, 601
Italian saut 428
Italian tofu sauts 429
Italy 431
J
jalapeno 25, 45, 64, 73, 84, 251, 257, 365, 395,
639
1alapeno Poppers 251, 256, 598
1amaica 393, 610
1amaican 1erk Sauce 199
1amaican 1ungle 393
1amaican 1ungle Sauce 201, 343, 393
1ambalaya 394
1apanese Sesame Kale with Miso 38, 600
jerk sauce 639
K
kaiser roll 147
kale 25, 38, 309, 370, 385, 400, 406, 639
kasha 259, 639
kebab 342, 639
Ketchup 58, 71, 230
ketchup 640
key lime juice 558
Key Lime Pie 558, 605
kg - equivalent measurement 684
kidney beans 23, 44, 52, 84, 111, 118
kilogram - equivalent measurement 684
Kitchen Safety 17
knead 640
Kuchen dough 447
L
l - equivalent measurement 684
large shells 21
Lasagna 290, 601, 606
lasagna noodles 21, 290, 322
lavender 21, 640
lb - equivalent measurement 683
leavening 461, 504
lecithin 503
Leek Salad 40, 599
leeks 24, 40, 105, 124, 138, 294, 324, 338, 370,
388, 405, 640
Lefsa 458, 602
legumes 615, 640
lemon 25, 42, 45, 51, 61, 64, 65, 69, 70, 72, 74,
207, 211, 216, 267, 363, 398, 430, 507, 531, 641
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lemon grass 641
Lemon Herb Dressing 61
Lemon Herb Sauce 202
lemon juice 58, 59, 198, 202, 225, 399, 403
lemon rind 445, 578
lemon zest 132
lentil 88, 89, 94, 118, 175, 325, 641
Leonardo's Vision 396, 593
lettuce 148, 149, 153, 155, 158, 327, 341, 641
lima beans 23, 118, 286, 642
lima beans - baby 296, 301, 359
lima beans - jumbo 121
lime 218, 642
linguini 21
Liquid Smoke 183, 510, 642
liter - equivalent measurement 684
living stock 137
lo mein noodle 47, 85
loaf 460
louisiana hot sauce 22, 185, 189, 200, 213
M
macaroni 642
Macaroni and Cheese 253
mace 21, 642, 676, 679
Mad Cow 8
magnesium 101
malt syrup 183, 564, 587
mango 67, 643
maple syrup 444, 456, 469, 541, 555, 564,
584, 604, 605, 606
marinade 355, 486
Marinara Sauce 126, 167, 203, 277, 281,
283, 291, 309, 321, 501, 508, 526, 592, 601, 606
marinate 485, 489, 643
Marinating 335, 355
marjoram 20, 57, 60, 61, 66, 80, 89, 104, 118,
121, 123, 134, 135, 141, 203, 235, 296, 329, 370,
378, 400, 407, 412, 425, 428, 430, 431, 643, 676,
677
marsala wine 428
masa harina 643
mash 643
Mashed Potatoes 231, 250, 254, 299, 305,
458, 463, 593, 596, 597, 604, 608
Matzoh Cracker Pancakes 467, 604
matzoh meal 244, 467, 644
Mayonnaise 29, 31, 32, 46, 62, 146, 147, 149,
153, 155
Meal Planner 604
Meal Planner & Themes chapter 595
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Measurement Conversion Table 683, 3
meat 85, 194, 206, 331, 344, 357, 395, 481, 493,
512, 619, 623, 634, 635, 644, 660, 662, 666
medallions 514
Mediterranean 216, 288, 294, 324, 363, 372
Mediterranean CousCous Salad 41, 599
Mediterranean Pasta Toss 397, 600
Mediterranean Potato Salad 43, 591, 601,
606
meringue 536
mesclum mix 24, 644
Meso America 324, 535
Mesquite 336
Metric Conversion Terms 684
Metric to Standard Table 3, 684
Mexican 151, 164, 257, 293, 303, 327, 340,
349, 350
Mexican Corn & Bean Salad 44, 598
Mexican Gluten Strips 340, 349, 352
Mexican Pinto Bean Soup 109, 341, 598
Mexican Quesadilla 164, 598
Mexican Sauce 164, 172, 205, 273, 278, 294,
303, 340, 349, 350, 352
Middle Eastern 74, 157
Middle Eastern Party - theme 599
Millet 255
millet 20, 584, 644
milliliter - equivalent measurement 684
mince, to 371, 644
Minestrone Soup 111, 601
mint 645, 676, 677
Miso Mincemeat Pie 559, 598
miso paste 22, 38, 86, 113, 560, 645
Miso Soup 113, 592, 601
mixed vegetables 327
ml - equivalent measurement 684
Mocha Frosting 534, 561
Mock Chicken Noodle Soup 114, 592, 596
Mock Chicken Salad 46, 602
Mock Poultry Marinade 148, 206
Mock Scrambled Eggs 496, 505, 604
molasses 22, 107, 108, 132, 182, 200, 201, 210,
227, 239, 439, 449, 453, 459, 556, 645
mole 645
Moonlight Sonata Soup 116, 592
Morning Coffee Cake 454, 456, 602, 606
Morning Coffee Cake Glaze 445, 446,
447, 455, 456
Mozzarella Sticks 256
Mucho Mexican Quesadilla 350
Muffins 450
MultiBean Soup 118, 592
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mung bean 376, 414, 646
Mushroom Barley Soup 119, 597
mushrooms 24, 34, 47, 90, 91, 113, 120, 134,
135, 167, 170, 173, 175, 177, 234, 264, 284, 291,
293, 314, 322, 342, 354, 370, 376, 383, 405, 408,
409, 416, 417, 425, 428, 430, 517
mustard 20, 71, 102, 182, 646, 676, 679
mustard greens 24, 646
mustard powder 58, 182, 227
N
Nachos 257, 598
nappa 24, 53, 156, 405, 646
nappa greens 318
navy beans 79, 118, 228
Near East 41
Neptune's Gift 399, 602
New World Lima Bean Soup 121, 592,
606
New World Stuffed Peppers 296, 597
New York Gluten Strip 520, 603, 605
Newton`s Law 401
non-dairy chocolate chips 22
non-dairy unsweetened chocolate chips
542, 546, 547, 549, 550, 564, 565
noodles 246
noodles, durham wheat 279
Nordic Rye Bread 459, 597, 602
Nordic Smorgasbord - theme 602
nutmeats 559
nutmeg 108, 201, 215, 502, 529, 543, 551, 571,
647, 676, 679
nutritional yeast 31, 115, 138, 198, 206, 288,
290, 505, 508, 522, 647
nuts 65, 72, 546, 569, 586
nuts, mixed 33
O
oatmeal 647
Oatmeal Pancakes 471, 593
Oatmeal Raisin Cookies 562
oats 647
Old Bay Seasoning 212, 506
Old Fashion Chocolate Fudge 564
Old Fashioned Black Bean Soup 122
Old World Leek Soup 124, 140, 607
olive 647
olive oil 23, 30, 34, 40, 42, 49, 50, 51, 52, 59,
60, 61, 64, 65, 72, 101, 111, 116, 121, 124, 126,
133, 135, 141, 168, 192, 195, 204, 220, 225, 234,
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243, 265, 291, 295, 306, 314, 316, 328, 363, 370,
372, 378, 381, 385, 388, 396, 397, 402, 407, 412,
415, 420, 424, 428, 429, 431, 448, 497, 525, 648
olive, black 42, 167, 257, 382, 403
olive, green 219
Olympian Sauce 207
onion 24, 36, 40, 67, 69, 73, 79, 82, 83, 87, 89,
90, 91, 94, 95, 97, 99, 101, 109, 111, 115, 116,
118, 120, 121, 123, 124, 128, 130, 133, 135, 138,
141, 150, 151, 158, 161, 165, 167, 168, 170, 173,
175, 203, 228, 235, 240, 244, 249, 259, 263, 264,
265, 284, 286, 288, 291, 293, 296, 300, 304, 306,
308, 309, 312, 314, 322, 324, 325, 328, 338, 340,
342, 354, 359, 361, 365, 370, 380, 381, 383, 385,
386, 388, 390, 394, 397, 401, 407, 409, 415, 417,
425, 428, 429, 431, 433, 466, 494, 499, 500, 502,
506, 517, 648, 679
onion hearts 366, 376, 378, 393, 399, 418,
423, 426
onion powder 20, 31, 55, 56, 71, 93, 183, 189,
205, 227, 288, 497, 505, 676, 679
onion, green 318
onion, red 24, 42, 43, 51, 103, 145, 158, 176,
257, 294, 363, 402
onion, spanish 102
orange 25, 33, 207, 211, 369, 403, 420, 559,
648
orange juice 199, 201, 206, 210, 213, 218,
507, 508, 607
oregano 20, 57, 60, 61, 84, 101, 104, 110, 111,
203, 204, 225, 284, 314, 370, 378, 407, 412, 415,
425, 428, 430, 431, 448, 499, 500, 649, 676, 677
Orient 324, 482
Oriental Banquet - theme 600
Oriental Lo Mein Salad 47, 600
Oriental Sesame Dressing 63, 605
Oriental Stir Fry 405, 601
orzo 21, 37, 127, 649
Ottoman 388
oyster mushroom 649
oz - equivalent measurement 683
P
Pacific Rim 535
pan fried 409
pan seared 484
Pancakes 464
pancakes 436, 465, 466, 467
papaya 67, 649
paper bag 262
paprika 21, 58, 82, 263, 306, 312, 385, 650,
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676, 679
paprika, spanish 382
parboil 334, 355
parsley 21, 51, 55, 56, 103, 158, 195, 209, 219,
326, 500, 502, 525, 650, 676, 677
parsnip 25, 94, 96, 391, 650
Pasta 258
pasta 34, 77, 136, 223, 431
Pasta Fagioli Soup 125, 592, 601
Pasta Primavera 407, 601
Pasta Salad with Fresh Basil 49, 591, 601
pasta shells 49
pastries 436
pastry 250, 463
pat 70, 72
patty 487
PDF 3, 650
peanut butter 22, 218, 549, 565
Peanut Butter Chip Brownies 565, 605
peanuts 23, 374, 651
pears 573, 651
peas 25, 250, 269, 280, 293, 299, 304, 322, 326,
360, 362, 364, 367, 391, 398, 420, 590, 651
peas, snap 400
peas, snow 25, 374, 376, 406, 414, 422
peas, split 118, 128
pecans 555
peck - equivalent measurement 683
Penne Alfredo Toss 411
penne pasta 21, 136, 398, 408, 411
pepper 652
Pepper Steak Sauce 208, 324
pepper, colored bell 25, 74, 151, 158, 167,
293, 296, 308, 315, 363, 368, 370, 374, 376, 378,
394, 397, 405, 409, 506, 517
pepper, green bell 32, 37, 41, 44, 51, 83, 87,
103, 110, 123, 127, 130, 134, 159, 161, 165, 170,
257, 259, 284, 306, 328, 342, 354, 361, 365, 388,
390, 393, 403, 407, 416, 418, 425, 428, 430, 431
pepper, red bell 37, 43, 44, 47, 84, 87, 110,
123, 127, 130, 134, 159, 161, 165, 262, 295, 324,
328, 338, 342, 354, 361, 365, 388, 390, 393, 403,
407, 416, 418, 421, 425, 428, 430, 431
pepper, spice 616
pepper, sweet 176
pepper, yellow bell 34, 110, 328, 361, 365,
388, 390, 393, 403, 407, 418, 425, 428, 430, 431
peppercorn 616
pepperoni 167
peppers, hot 378
Perfect Gluten Flank Steak 114, 152, 165,
283, 300, 342, 344, 349, 365, 368, 372, 378, 382,
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383, 385, 401, 403, 411, 433, 518, 524, 526, 603
Pesto Sauce 209, 601
Philly Cheese Steak Sandwich 165
pickle 652
pie 300, 544, 552
pie crust 528
pie shell 558, 567
pierogie 436
pierogie dough 318
Pierogie Italia 412
Pierogies 318, 380, 387, 396, 412, 462
pignoli nuts 209, 408, 652
Pilaf 259, 400, 597, 605
pilaf 238
pimento tree 610
pinch - equivalent measurement 683
pine nuts 652
pineapple 25, 33, 368, 414
pineapple juice 210, 212, 217, 369
pinto beans 23, 44, 84, 109, 118, 652
Pita Bread 145, 146, 147, 158, 160, 176, 461
pitted dates 554
Pizza 167, 607
pizza 294, 298, 436
Pizza Dough 167, 277, 295, 299, 308, 457
pizza pockets 271
plantain 368, 414
poach 653
poblano chili 653
pocket 299, 308
Polenta 298, 593
polenta 653
Polynesian Sauce 210, 348, 414
Polynesian Seitan Medallions 348, 599
Polynesian Tofu & Vegetables 414, 599
pomegranate 653
portabella mushroom 24, 138, 197, 294,
308, 324, 329, 338, 370, 372, 378, 384, 389, 401,
408, 412, 419, 426, 433, 525, 654
Portabella Mushroom Burger 168, 603
portabella mushroom caps 37, 105, 126,
159, 169, 316, 421, 423, 431
Portabella Orzo Soup 126, 601
Portable Document Format 650
Pot Pie 300, 593
pot pie 271, 301
Pot Pie Dough 301, 463
potato 25, 82, 87, 95, 124, 128, 138, 230, 245,
248, 249, 254, 263, 287, 301, 325, 359, 366, 385,
391, 394, 466, 590, 654
Potato Pancakes 466, 607
Potato Pocket 299
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potato stuffed pierogie 380, 387, 396, 412
potato, idaho 36
potato, red 43, 399
potato, white 97
powdered cloves 556
powdered ginger 132
powdered lecithin 503
powdered sage 206, 508, 522
powdered savory 115, 240, 522
powdered thyme 81, 82, 115, 116, 129, 152,
154, 190, 206, 207, 304, 310, 322, 398, 420, 507,
508, 522
Preface chapter 1
processed 437
protein 163, 175, 232, 261, 344, 348, 370, 385,
409, 481, 488, 496, 500, 581
pt - equivalent measurement 683
Puff Pastry 250, 474
puff pastry 440, 654
pumpkin 78, 106, 536, 566, 654
Pumpkin Pie 566, 598
pumpkin pie 559
pureed 587
Q
qt - equivalent measurement 683
Quesadilla 303, 350
quesadilla 143, 172, 205, 349, 350, 352
quick soak method 233
Quinoa 261
quinoa 20, 261, 286, 584, 655
R
radish 655
ragout 655
raisin 543, 554, 559, 562, 656
Ranger Cookies 568, 597
raspberry 656
raspberry juice 199
Ratatoulli 415
ravioli 656
raw food 554
Raw Food Pat 72, 591, 602
recipe templates 705
red beans 98, 118
red wine 204
refried beans 273, 278, 293, 303, 327, 350
Resource Directory chapter 685 - 3, 609
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Reverse Marinade 335
rhutabaga 96
rice 77, 656
rice crispies 568
rice ring 260
rice syrup 657
rice vinegar 318
ricotta cheese 291
risotto 657
roast 657
Roasted Red Peppers 262, 603
roasted sesame oil 23, 39, 47, 53, 63, 76, 85,
113, 132, 156, 181, 196, 208, 212, 218, 255, 317,
374, 376, 405, 414, 418, 422
roasted sesame seeds 554
rolled oats 471, 562, 568, 584, 647
rolls 477
romaine lettuce 36, 72, 145, 658
Roman Feast - theme 601
rosemary 20, 400, 658, 676, 677
roulade 658
rue 658
rum liquor 535, 551
Russian 417
rutabaga 24, 391
rye 659
rye bread 459
rye flour 459
S
saffron 659
sage 20, 659, 676, 677
sage, rubbed 296, 301
salad 27
Salad Dressings 54
salad greens 146
Salads, Dressings & Dips chapter 27
Salsa 73, 152, 164, 173, 278, 293, 303, 327,
341, 351, 353, 598
salt 20
sandwiches 143
saponin 261, 655
sauces 179
Sauces & Gravies chapter 179
saut 485
saut, to 659
Sauted Cabbage & Potatoes 263
Sauted Mushroom or Onions 264
Sauted Spinach 265, 593, 608
Sauts chapter 357
sauts 493
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savory 21, 207, 496, 659, 676, 677
scald 660
scallions 86, 98, 113, 318
sea salt 206, 509, 584, 590
Seafood Sauce 211, 508
sear, to 400
searing 660
seaweed 113
seeds 65, 586
Seitan 511
seitan 348, 393, 395, 488, 644, 660
Seitan Deluxe 516
seitan medallions 317, 348, 359, 368, 380,
417, 419, 423
seitan steak 344, 383
Seitan Stroganoff 417
Seitan Supreme 348, 359, 368, 380, 383, 417,
419, 423, 512, 515
Seitan, Basic 280, 304, 317, 342, 365, 367,
393, 417, 419, 512, 513, 515, 516, 517
semolina flour 660
semolina pasta 241
sesame seeds 23, 38, 47, 53, 63, 196, 554, 661
sesame tahini 22, 28, 74, 216
Sesame Tahini Sauce 74
shell pasta 136
Shepherd's Pie 304, 593
shortening 661
side dishes 223
silver dollar mushrooms 314
simmer, to 395, 661
Singapore Sunset 418, 599
Singapore Sunset Sauce 212, 419
skewers 342, 354
Sloppy 1oe 170
Smoked Flavoring 336
Sonoran Black Bean Soup 130, 607
soup 338, 493
Soup Making & Other Basics chapter
77
Sour Cream 55, 75, 100, 140, 188, 194, 215,
273, 274, 293, 303, 327, 351, 353, 367, 387, 417,
455, 458, 467, 468, 605, 607
South Pacific 414
South Pacific Feast - theme 599
Southeast Asian 418
Southern Comfort 420, 593
Southern Fried Gluten Cutlet 522
Southern Style Fruit Cobbler 569
Soy Based Meats 483
soy beans 661
soy burger 296
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soy cheddar cheese 22, 257, 273, 274, 285,
293, 303, 351
soy cheese 146, 161, 164, 166, 171, 177, 186,
224, 251, 253, 278, 319, 327, 329, 508
soy flour 20, 479, 515
Soy Ham & Turkey Melt Sandwich 171,
177
soy margarine 23, 81, 93, 107, 171, 180, 185,
190, 198, 239, 250, 254, 266, 267, 288, 301, 309,
312, 315, 326, 399, 426, 438, 439, 440, 442, 444,
445, 451, 453, 455, 456, 463, 465, 467, 468, 470,
472, 474, 477, 505, 529, 533, 535, 536, 538, 542,
545, 548, 551, 556, 557, 561, 562, 564, 566, 568,
570, 571, 574, 575, 578
soy meal 490
soy milk 22, 55, 56, 88, 90, 92, 93, 106, 129,
140, 153, 154, 180, 220, 221, 231, 242, 251, 254,
256, 281, 283, 321, 401, 438, 439, 440, 442, 444,
445, 449, 451, 453, 455, 456, 460, 465, 467, 468,
470, 472, 474, 483, 487, 523, 524, 532, 534, 539,
543, 547, 552, 564, 566, 570, 571, 574, 577, 578,
581, 584, 587, 589
Soy Milk Doughnuts 571
soy monterey jack cheese 352
soy mozzarella cheese 22, 167, 173, 256,
277, 281, 283, 290, 308, 311, 317, 321, 396, 526
soy oil 23, 36, 43, 45, 55, 56, 57, 58, 60, 62, 63,
66, 71, 78, 79, 81, 82, 87, 89, 90, 91, 94, 95, 97,
100, 102, 110, 114, 115, 119, 120, 123, 129, 130,
138, 147, 151, 153, 154, 158, 163, 166, 170, 174,
184, 188, 189, 191, 194, 197, 202, 205, 206, 214,
220, 221, 227, 230, 235, 240, 242, 244, 245, 246,
248, 249, 251, 259, 263, 264, 279, 281, 283, 284,
288, 296, 300, 312, 321, 322, 337, 359, 361, 365,
366, 368, 380, 383, 386, 390, 393, 394, 401, 409,
417, 423, 426, 433, 440, 457, 459, 461, 465, 466,
467, 470, 472, 473, 474, 476, 479, 496, 497, 499,
501, 505, 506, 508, 510, 520, 522, 524, 526, 536,
544, 555, 577
soy parmesan cheese 180, 209, 281, 290,
295, 314, 526
soy products 481
soy sauce 22, 38, 47, 53, 57, 63, 65, 76, 85, 89,
98, 113, 120, 138, 156, 181, 196, 197, 206, 208,
210, 213, 217, 218, 318, 508
spaghetti 85, 114
Spanish 381
Spanish Rice Casserole 306
Spice Application Chart 678
spice blend 299
Spicy Avocado Dressing 64
spinach 24, 95, 116, 134, 138, 172, 265, 288,
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352, 367, 370, 373, 375, 379, 385, 387, 406, 412,
525, 662
Spinach & Gluten Quesadilla 352
Spinach Quesadilla 172, 603, 606
Split Pea Soup 128, 592
spring form 549
spring roll wraps 24, 156
Sprouting 615
sprouts 145, 146, 376, 414, 615
squash 271, 293, 596, 663
Staff of Life 437
steak-burger 409
Steaks 344
steam 320, 357, 663
Steamed Artichokes 267
steep 664
stew 316, 394, 485, 493, 664
Stewed Pears 573, 600
Stewed Tomatoes 268
stir fried 405
stir fry 357, 407, 421
stock 664
strawberries 574
Strawberry Shortcake 574, 603
String Bean Salad 50, 591, 598, 599, 604
string beans 24, 50, 52, 134, 135, 234, 293,
299, 301, 304, 359, 361, 363, 367, 370, 372, 391,
398, 403, 407, 412, 414, 426, 664
Stromboli 308, 601
stromboli 457
Stuffed Acorn Squash 309
Stuffed Baked Tomatoes 311, 607
Stuffed Cabbage Leaves 312
Stuffed Mushrooms Italienne 314
Stuffed Peppers with Rice 315
Stuffed Portabella Mushroom 316
stuffed vegetables 271
stuffing 487, 664
sucanat 22, 107, 187, 458, 470, 479, 532, 538,
539, 542, 543, 549, 552, 564, 565, 567, 665
sucrose 665
sugar 665
Sugar Glazed Beets or Carrots 266, 593,
596
sugar, brown 227, 239, 311, 455, 544, 568
sugar, dark brown 187, 543, 545, 556, 562,
567
sugar, powdered 561
sugar, raw 22, 58, 62, 63, 67, 71, 107, 170,
183, 187, 214, 218, 266, 391, 439, 440, 442, 445,
449, 451, 453, 456, 457, 458, 459, 465, 468, 470,
472, 474, 476, 479, 529, 531, 532, 533, 536, 538,
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539, 540, 542, 545, 547, 551, 552, 553, 557, 558,
561, 564, 565, 567, 568, 570, 571, 573, 574, 576,
577, 578
Suggested Baby Foods 591
summer squash 24, 135, 354, 365, 416, 679
sunflower seeds 23, 65, 72, 554
Sunrise Seed Sauce 65, 599, 605
Swedish Meatball Gravy 215, 502, 602
Swedish Meatballs 215, 502, 602
Sweet & Sour Sauce 214, 251, 318
sweet potato 25, 78, 94, 96, 99, 108, 109, 116,
131, 138, 239, 287, 299, 304, 353, 361, 363, 368,
374, 376, 391, 393, 398, 403, 414, 666, 673, 679
syrup 33, 541, 573
T
Table of Contents 3
Tabouli 51, 238, 599
taco 349
taco shells - hard 24
taco shells - soft 24
Taco-Style Ground 'Beef` 499
tahini 666
Tahini Sauce 66, 70, 158, 216
Tahini Vinaigrette 66, 607
tamale 320, 666
Tamari 76, 406, 423
tamari 667
tamarind 667
Tantric Dumplings 317, 600
taro 667
tarragon 21, 58, 60, 61, 104, 190, 203, 212,
400, 427, 668, 676, 677
Tbsp - equivalent measurement 683
Tempeh 488
tempeh 22, 194, 342, 347, 365, 374, 383, 395,
482, 488, 510, 512, 524, 644, 668
Tempeh Bacon Strips 510, 606
Tempeh Cooking Tips 489
tempeh cutlets 524
tempeh steak 344
Teriyaki Sauce 217, 347, 422
Teriyaki Tempeh 347, 599, 601
Teriyaki Tofu 421
Textured Vegetable Protein 670
Thai 374
Thai Peanut Sauce 218, 374
Thai Sweet Potato Soup 131, 599
Thanksgiving - theme 597
The Etruscan 192, 372
The Hispania 381
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The 1oe Hercules 370
The Maximillion 164, 293
The Neapolitan 294
The Olympian 402, 605
The Paul Bunyon 409
The Thomas Edison 423
The Westerner 433
Themes 596
Three Bean Salad 52, 600, 602
thyme 20, 57, 60, 61, 72, 80, 87, 89, 104, 111,
118, 120, 121, 123, 124, 127, 134, 135, 138, 141,
168, 170, 173, 175, 203, 235, 264, 269, 284, 296,
301, 312, 328, 359, 370, 380, 382, 384, 385, 395,
400, 401, 403, 417, 423, 427, 431, 494, 496, 668,
676, 677
Tofu 483
tofu 22, 98, 113, 114, 194, 277, 278, 288, 293,
297, 301, 319, 321, 322, 329, 342, 365, 369, 372,
385, 395, 396, 398, 403, 414, 482, 483, 488, 505,
512, 520, 524, 644, 668
Tofu 'Tuna' Casserole 322, 593, 607
Tofu Buffalo Wings 237
Tofu Burger 173, 606
Tofu Cacciatore 424
Tofu Cooking Tips 484
Tofu Crabcakes 506
tofu cutlets 369, 385, 396, 414, 524
Tofu Dijon 426
Tofu Marsala 428
Tofu Nappa Salad 53
Tofu Scalloppine 429
tofu steak 344
Tofu Tamales 319, 598
tofu, extra-firm 345, 376, 382, 399, 420, 422,
424, 426, 428, 429, 508
tofu, firm 22, 31, 53, 148, 154, 173, 237, 290,
305, 306, 310, 324, 374, 383, 393, 419, 506, 522
tofu, silken 22, 198, 275, 290, 449, 483, 491,
528, 547, 552, 555, 558, 587
tofu, silken-firm 54, 56, 62, 75, 503, 532,
549, 550, 577
tofu, soft 520
Tofu/Tempeh Parmesan 321
tomato 25, 669
tomato juice 93, 103
tomato paste 71, 73, 130, 138, 173, 182, 227,
494
tomato puree 205, 307, 313, 371, 395
tomato, canned 25, 84
tomato, cherry 37, 342, 354
tomato, fresh 25, 32, 34, 49, 51, 69, 103, 133,
145, 146, 148, 149, 153, 155, 158, 161, 172, 177,
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257, 308, 311, 327, 340, 679
tomato, green 67
tomato, plum 268
tomato, stewed 112, 136, 204, 268, 284, 286,
297, 329, 362, 379, 382, 389, 408, 416, 425
tomato, sundried 25, 41, 192, 363, 397, 402
topping 555
tortilla chips 257, 287
tortillas 24, 164, 172, 273, 274, 278, 294, 303,
324, 327, 329, 341, 350, 352
tortilla-turnover 351, 353
Triple Chocolate Cake 575, 605
truffle 669
tsp - equivalent measurement 683
tuber 670
tumeric 67, 115, 199
turnip 24, 96, 138, 391
turnovers 271, 463
Tuscan Toss 431, 601
Tuscan Wrap 324
TVP 22, 46, 163, 482, 490, 493, 512, 644, 670
TVP burger blend 22, 84, 163, 167, 170,
273, 274, 277, 284, 290, 293, 296, 312, 329, 350,
370, 389, 409, 490, 492, 494, 496, 497, 499, 500,
502, 671
TVP burger blend - prepared 84, 170,
329, 497
TVP burger style 22, 493
TVP Chunks 493
TVP poultry style 22, 46, 493
U
unbleached pastry flour 20, 438, 574, 578
unbleached white flour 20, 167, 184, 194,
214, 221, 231, 242, 251, 256, 281, 439, 440, 442,
445, 449, 451, 453, 455, 457, 458, 459, 462, 463,
465, 466, 467, 468, 470, 471, 474, 478, 496, 507,
513, 515, 516, 522, 524, 526, 529, 533, 536, 537,
542, 545, 551, 557, 562, 565, 568, 570, 571, 576
unsweetened coconut flakes 552, 554, 555,
557
V
V8 tomato juice 93, 103
vanilla 21, 671
vanilla extract 455, 533, 539, 542, 545, 549,
551, 552, 555, 561, 562, 564, 566, 568, 576, 578,
587, 671
Vegan 644
Vegan Meatballs 500
Vegan Meatloaf 494, 593, 597, 604
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Vegan Meats chapter 481, 148, 344, 357,
623, 635, 644, 660, 662, 668, 669, 670, 671
vegan-style bacon 147
vegan-style bacon bits 510
vegan-style burgers 337
vegan-style canadian bacon 36, 171, 240,
607
vegan-style hotdogs 337
vegan-style pepperoni 167
Vegetable Barley Soup 133, 592, 596, 605
Vegetable Bean Burritos 327
Vegetable Bean Loaf 325
vegetable bouillon 22, 139
Vegetable Kebabs 353, 600, 603
Vegetable Medley 269, 593, 597, 605
Vegetable Noodle Soup 135, 592
vegetable oil spray 544
vegetable paste 139
Vegetable Stock 31, 39, 46, 78, 79, 81, 82, 87,
89, 90, 92, 93, 94, 95, 97, 98, 99, 101, 103, 104,
105, 106, 108, 110, 112, 115, 116, 118, 120, 121,
123, 124, 125, 127, 128, 130, 131, 133, 136, 137,
141, 181, 184, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 194, 195,
202, 205, 206, 207, 208, 211, 214, 215, 220, 225,
228, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 240, 243, 244, 255,
259, 263, 264, 265, 269, 275, 276, 286, 297, 301,
304, 306, 310, 313, 314, 315, 322, 338, 342, 344,
345, 348, 359, 361, 364, 366, 367, 369, 371, 373,
374, 376, 379, 380, 382, 384, 386, 389, 391, 395,
396, 398, 399, 401, 404, 408, 409, 411, 413, 417,
420, 424, 425, 427, 428, 430, 431, 433, 493, 497,
505, 507, 508, 510, 513, 515, 516, 518, 520, 522,
590, 664
vegetables 161, 164, 224, 277, 303, 350, 590
Veggie Burger 175, 603
Veggie Melt Sandwich 176
veggie pockets 436
Veggie Works Vegetarian Restaurant 1
Verde Sauce 219
Vichyssoise 140
vinaigrette 671
vinegar 671
virgin olive oil 57, 209, 588
vital wheat gluten 20, 326, 442, 445, 449,
451, 455, 457, 459, 461, 462, 475, 476, 478, 496,
497, 513, 515, 516, 518, 520, 522, 576, 672
vitamins 101, 672
volcanic rock 332
W
Waffles 468, 605
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wakame seaweed 113, 400
walnut 23, 175, 209, 221, 456, 534, 559, 672
Walnut Gravy 220, 326
Wheat Based Meats 511
wheat bread stuffing mix 235
wheat meats 482
Whipped Cream 539, 569, 574, 577
White Bread 478, 593, 603
white cabbage 29, 111, 135, 263, 385
White Cake 555, 578
white corn 25, 247
White Sauce 186, 221, 224, 229, 253, 275,
279, 311, 396, 592
white wine 102, 120, 189, 190, 192, 264, 395,
408, 425, 427, 430
whole grain bread 145, 146, 147, 149, 160,
166, 176, 444
Whole Wheat Bread 171, 475, 477, 593,
597, 606
whole wheat flour 20, 90, 91, 150, 151, 153,
154, 158, 169, 173, 175, 184, 189, 191, 220, 281,
283, 326, 359, 395, 401, 424, 428, 429, 442, 449,
455, 457, 459, 461, 463, 476, 523, 524, 536
whole wheat matzo meal crackers 244,
467
whole wheat pastry flour 438, 451, 465,
468
whole wheat pita bread 24, 145, 146, 158,
176
Whole Wheat Rolls 477, 605
whole wheat toast 604
Whoopie Wrap 317, 328, 607
Why Vegan? 4
wild rice 259, 672
won ton 673
wood chips 336, 354
world regions 595
wraps 271
X
xanthum gum 22, 504, 532, 673
xylitol 22, 33, 62, 63, 67, 71, 107, 187, 197, 218,
266, 319, 439, 442, 445, 456, 457, 458, 468, 470,
472, 474, 476, 479, 529, 531, 532, 533, 536, 538,
539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 545, 547, 549, 551, 552,
557, 558, 561, 562, 564, 565, 567, 568, 570, 571,
573, 577, 578, 585, 586, 587, 673
Y
yam 25, 78, 94, 96, 99, 108, 109, 116, 131, 138,
239, 287, 293, 299, 304, 353, 361, 363, 368, 374,
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376, 391, 393, 394, 398, 403, 414, 590, 666, 673,
679
yellow corn 25
yellow squash 161, 340
Z
ziti 21
zucchini 25, 87, 111, 133, 135, 138, 141, 150,
161, 269, 294, 297, 301, 308, 340, 354, 365, 370,
372, 395, 400, 401, 403, 405, 408, 416, 433, 674,
679
Zucchini Rice Soup 141, 592
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